1.1 Introduction to Com Sys (Student) (1)
1.1 Introduction to Com Sys (Student) (1)
BTB35203
Topic 1
Introduction to Communication System
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1.1 Introduction
Communications
Transfer of information from one place to another.
Should be efficient, reliable and secured.
“A communication system is a process of conveying
information from a source to a destination”.
Communication system
Components/subsystems act together to accomplish
information transfer/exchange.
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1.1 Introduction
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Definition
Communication
Telecommunication – using
electric/electronic/EM waves
Data communication
Voice communication
Video communication
Multimedia communication
1.1 Introduction
Methods of communication:
1. Face to face
2. Signals
3. Written word (letters)
4. Electrical innovations:
Telegraph
Telephone
Radio
Television
Internet (computer)
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A) Requirements
1. Rate of information transfer
The rate of information transfer is defined as the amount
of information that must be communicated from source to
destination.
It will determine the physical form and technique used to
transmit and receive information and therefore determines
the way system is designed and constructed .
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A) Requirements
3. Simplicity of the system
Any communication system must be convenient in order to
be effective and efficient and easy to use.
4. Reliability
Users must be able to depend on a communication system.
It must work when needed and transmit and receive
information without errors or with an acceptable error.
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Requirements for Data
Communications Systems
Availability
Reliability - mean time between failures
(MTBF), mean time to repair (MTTR)
Online and real-time – real enough time
Responsive
User friendly interface
Ergonomics
Flexibility and growth
Requirements for Voice
Communications Systems
Availability
Reliability
Response time
User friendly
Universal service
Fast
Inexpensive
Others
B) Elements
Input
Message Input Transmitter
Transducer
noise Channel
Output Transmission
Message Output medium
Receiver
Transducer
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B) Elements
B) Elements
Input Transducer
A device that converts energy from one form to another.
Convert an input signal into an electrical waveform.
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B) Elements
Transmitter
Modifies or converts the baseband signal into format
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B) Elements
Channel (Transmission medium)
Physical medium through which the transmitter output is sent.
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Media and Channels
Signals
Medium Transmission speed
analog Metal wire .0012Mbps - 10 Mbps
digital Microwave .256 Mbps - 100Mbps
Cables Fiber optics .5Mbps - 1,000Mbps
Twisted-pair interference
Coaxial cable 20x more expensive
5.500 simultaneous phone calls
Fiber-optic
1 fiber 30.000 phone calls
Wireless
microwave
satellites
Radio, Infrared, Cellular Radio, Mobile computing
GPS global positioning system
Output Transducer
Converts electrical signals to its original waveform.
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B) Elements
WAN/LAN
(DIGITAL)
IP IP
ANALOG GATEWAY GATEWAY ANALOG
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B) Elements
RADIO AAAIR
FREE SPACE
STATION
DS1
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C) Analog vs. Digital
The signal can be analog or digital message:
Analog
An analog signal is a smoothly and continuously varying voltage or
current. Examples are:
Sine wave
Voice
Video (TV)
Digital
Digital signals change in steps or in discrete increments.
Most digital signals use binary or two-state codes. Examples are:
Telegraph (Morse code)
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C) Analog vs. Digital
Digital Analog
Advantages: Disadvantages:
Inexpensive Expensive
Privacy preserved (Data No privacy preserved
encrypt.) Cannot merge different data
Can merge different data No error correction capability
Error correction
Disadvantages: Advantages:
Larger bandwidth Smaller bandwidth
Synchronization problem is Synchronization problem is
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D) Mode of Communication
Broadcasting
Involves the use of a single powerful transmitter transmit to
many receivers. Demodulation takes place in the receiver.
Information-bearing signals flow in one direction.
Example : TV and radio (Simplex).
Point-to-point Communication
Where a communication process takes place over a link
between a single transmitter and a receiver.
Information-bearing signals flow in bidirectional, which
requires the use of a transmitter and receiver at each end of
the link.
Example: Telephone (Full Duplex) and walkie talkie (Half
Duplex).
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Communication hardware
Modems 9.600 14.400 28.800 bps
Transmission mode
Simplex 1 circuit , 1 direction
Half-duplex 1 circuit, 2 directions, difficult co-ordination
Full duplex 2 circuits, 2 directions
Transmission accurateness
parity bits forward and backward error correction
Processors
multiplexers frequency, time or statistic time distribution
front-end processors to handle routine communication tasks
with peripheral equipment
Star
all communications go via the central system
Bus
can easily be extended at the ends
Ring
more secure
Star network O’Brien 147 - 148
With direct
connections
Point-to-point lines
Shared usage of a
broadband
network
Multidrop lines
Ring Network
Network
Server
Shared
printer
PC-workstation PC-workstation PC-workstation
Port to
other networks
WAN - Internetwork
LAN’s Mainframe,
hosts
network
in US
network
in Europe
LAN’s
Internet
Tymnet
network
in Australia
Cisco corporation network
Client/server network
Company A
Internet
Router
Firewall
Intranet
Firewall
Router
Company B
Intranet
Process of modulation
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1.2 Modulation
Carrier signal
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1.2 Modulation
Baseband Signal
Base band signal is the modulating signal/original information
Modulated Signal
Modulated signal is baseband signal which its original
o Carrier Signal
• waveform (usually sinusoidal) that is modulated (modified)
with an input signal for the purpose of conveying information
• usually a much higher frequency than the input signal.
• Its purpose is either to
• - transmit the information through space as an
• electromagnetic wave (e.g in radio communication)
• - allow several carriers at different frequencies to
• share a common physical transmission medium by
• frequency division multiplexing (e.g tv system).
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1.2 Modulation
Types of modulation :
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1.2 Why modulate?
Reduce noise and interference
By using proper frequency where noise and interference are at
minimum
Increasing power is costly and may damage equipment
Frequency Assignment
For TV and radio broadcasting, each station has a different
assigned carrier
Ease of radiation
o related to antenna design & smaller size. Low loss and low
dispersion
Multiplexing
Combining several signals for simultaneous transmission on
one channel by placing each signal on different carrier
frequency
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1.2 Modulation
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1.3 Parameters
1) Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR)
SNR is defined as the ratio of signal power to noise power.
Noise distorts the signal and accumulated along the path.
It is normally measured in Decibel (dB), defined as 10 times
the algorithm (to base 10) of the power ratio.
dBm is a dB level using a 1mW reference.
dBW is a dB level using a 1W reference.
signal power (W ) Ps
SNR =
noise power (W ) Pn
Ps Vs2 / Rin
SNRdB 10 log 10 log 2 dB
Pn Vn / Rout
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1.3 Parameters
Example 1: Convert 100W to dB and dBm.
occupied by a signal.
Specifically, bandwidth is the difference between the upper
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1.3 Parameters
bandwidth.
Shannon limit for information capacity, C
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1.3 Parameters
4) Noise
Noise is any interference that disturbs the legible transmission of a
signal (any unwanted signal in a CS)
It is a random, undesirable electric energy that enters the
communication system via the communication medium and
interferes with the transmitted message.
Noise can occur in various ways :
External noise (generated outside the device or circuit)
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1.3 Parameters
N (Watt) = KTB
or
N(dBm) = 10log(KTB/1mW)
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Power Measurement (dB, dBm)
The decibel (dB) is a transmission-measuring unit used to
express gain and losses an electronic devices and circuits
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Power Measurement (dB, dBm)
If two powers are expressed in the same unit (eg: watts or
microwatts), their ratio is a dimensionless quantity that can
be expressed in decibel form as follows:
P1
dB 10 log10 ( )
P2
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Power Measurement (dB, dBm)
When used in electronic circuits to measure a power gain or loss,
that equation can rewritten as
Pout
Gain (dB) 10 log10 ( )
Pin
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Power Measurement (dB, dBm)
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Electromagnetic Frequency Spectrum
1) Frequency, f (Hz)
Frequency is the number of cycles of a repetitive wave that occur in a
given period of time.
Frequency is measured in cycles per second (cps).
The unit of frequency is the hertz (Hz).
2) Wavelength, λ (m)
Wavelength is the distance occupied by one cycle of a wave and is usually expressed in meters.
Wavelength is also the distance traveled by an electromagnetic wave during the time of one
cycle.
Frequency and Wavelength
λ = c/f
Wavelength = speed of light ÷ frequency
Therefore λ = 3 × 108 / f
Example:
Determine the wavelength if the frequency is 4MHz?
λ = 3 x 108/ (4 x 106)
= 75 m
Electromagnetic Frequency Spectrum
Example 6
A signal with a wavelength of 1.5m , what is its
frequency?
Answer : λ = 3x108 / f
f = 3x108 / λ
= 200 x 106
= 200 MHz
Frequency Bands
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4. Radio Communication System
It is wireless communication system
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4. Radio Communication System
Transmitting Receiving
antenna antenna
Transmitter Receiver
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4. Radio Communication System
The three waves propagation methods:
Ground wave propagation
Earth
Receiver
Transmitter
Fig: Radio wave propagation methods
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4. Radio Communication System
There are three main type of propagations:
Sky-wave propagation
Dominants mode for frequencies between 2 – 30 MHz range
Sky waves are those waves that radiated towards ionosphere.
By a process of refraction and reflection, the receiver on the
earth will receive the signal. The various layers of the
ionosphere have specific effects on the propagation of radio
waves.
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4. Radio Communication System
There are areas of no coverage along the earth surface
between transmitting and receiving antenna
The angle of reflection and the loss of signal depend on the
frequency, time, season, activities of the sun etc
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Satellite Communication
Satellite employs LOS radio transmission over very long distance
It offers broad coverage even across the ocean and can handle
bulk of very long distance telecommunication
Satellite
down-link
uplink
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Historical Development
Year Events
1844 Telegraph
1876 Telephone
1904 AM Radio
1923 Television
1936 FM Radio
1962 Satellite
1966 Optical links using laser and fiber optics
1972 Cellular Telephone
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History
Telegraph
Telephone
Computer
Transistor
Large-Scale Integrated Circuits
Satellite
Historical Development
Year Events
1975 First digital telephone switch
1975 Wideband communication system (cable TV etc)
1980 Compact disc is developed by Philip & Sony
1981 FCC adopts rules for commercial cellular telephone
1982 Internet is used to replace ARPANET
1985 Fax machines widely available in offices
1989 First SONET standard optical fiber products released
1990 WWW becomes part of the internet
1990-2000 Digital communication system (ISDN, BISDN, HDTV,
handheld computers, digital cellular etc Global
telecom system
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Applications of Telecommunications
Business
Telecommunications • Centralized
• Distributed
• Client/server
Telecommunications • Interorganizational
Architectures • Global
Electronic meeting
Electronic commu- Business process
systems
nications system systems
Technology trends
Towards open and interconnected local and global digital networks for voice,
data and video, using high-speed fiber-optics and satellites.
Application Trends
Changing technology
Legislative & regulation
Changing business environment
Limitation in a Communication System
There are two categories of limitations:
Technological constraint
Equipment ability
Economy and cost factor
National and international law and agreement as well as
standardization (such as ITU etc)
Interaction with existing system
Physical constraint
Bandwidth
The difference between the upper frequency and lower frequency
of the signal or the equipment operation range
Noise
Any unwanted electrical energy present in the usable passband
of a communication circuit
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