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1.1 Introduction to Com Sys (Student) (1)

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6 views

1.1 Introduction to Com Sys (Student) (1)

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Amin Najm
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© © All Rights Reserved
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COMMUNICATION SYSTEM

BTB35203

Topic 1
Introduction to Communication System

Communication Technology Section


21/01/25 1
Contents

21/01/25 2
21/01/25 3
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.

 Electronic Communication system


 Transmission, reception, and processing of information
between two or more locations using electronic circuits.
 “An electronic communication system is transferring information
using an electrical field as a mean of signal”.

21/01/25 4
1.1 Introduction

21/01/25 5
Definition

 Communication
 Telecommunication – using
electric/electronic/EM waves
 Data communication
 Voice communication
 Video communication
 Multimedia communication
1.1 Introduction

 Communication is the process of exchanging information.


 Main barriers are language and distance.

 Methods of communication:
1. Face to face
2. Signals
3. Written word (letters)
4. Electrical innovations:
 Telegraph

 Telephone

 Radio

 Television

 Internet (computer)

21/01/25 7
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 .

2. Purity of signal received


 The received signal must be the same as the transmitted
signal.

21/01/25 8
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.

21/01/25 9
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

21/01/25 12
B) Elements
B) Elements
 Input Transducer
 A device that converts energy from one form to another.
 Convert an input signal into an electrical waveform.

Example: microphone converts human voice into electrical


signal referred to as the baseband signal or message signal.

Input message input Baseband/message signal


transducer

eg. voice microphone electrical signal

21/01/25 14
B) Elements
 Transmitter
 Modifies or converts the baseband signal into format

appropriate for efficient channel of transmission.


[Example: If the channel is fiber optic cable, the transmitter converts the
baseband signal into light frequency and the transmitted signal is light].
 Transmitter also use to reformat/reshape the signal so that the
channel will not distort is as much. Modulation takes place in the
transmitter. It involves static variation of amplitude, phase or
frequency of the carrier in accordance to a message signal.

Baseband/message signal transmitted signal


Tx

eg: electrical signal transmitter optical signal

21/01/25 15
B) Elements
 Channel (Transmission medium)
 Physical medium through which the transmitter output is sent.

 Divided into 2 basic groups:


 Guided Electromagnetic Wave Channel (wire, coaxial cable,
optical fiber)
 Electromagnetic Wave Propagation Channel (wireless broadcast
channel, mobile radio channel, satellite)
 Introduces distortion, noise and interference – in the channel,
transmitted signal is attenuated and distorted. Signal
attenuation increase along with the length of channel.
Transmitted signal Received signal
channel

Distortion & Noise

21/01/25 16
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

text: O’Brien p183 - 186


B) Elements
 Receiver
 To extract the desired signal from the output channel and to

convert it to a form suitable for the output transducer.


 Demodulation takes place in the receiver.

 Output Transducer
 Converts electrical signals to its original waveform.

Received signal Output signal Output Output message


Rx
transducer voice
eg: electrical
signal

21/01/25 18
B) Elements

DIGITAL MODEM ANALOG MODEM DIGITAL

WAN/LAN
(DIGITAL)
IP IP
ANALOG GATEWAY GATEWAY ANALOG

21/01/25 19
B) Elements

RADIO AAAIR
FREE SPACE
STATION

ANALOG ANALOG ANALOG

DS1

ANALOG CODEC CODEC ANALOG

21/01/25 20
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)

 Continuous wave (CW) code

 Serial binary code (used in computers)

21/01/25 21
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

relatively difficult. relatively easier.

21/01/25 22
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).

21/01/25 23
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

text: O’Brien p 187 - 189


Network Topology

 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

- Efficient , also for high speeds


- With a large number of workstations cabling might be a problem
Bus network

Shared usage of a
broadband
network

Multidrop lines

- more complex hardware


- simpler cabling system
O’Brien 191
Ring Networks O’Brien 147

Ring Network

- more equal basis


LAN
PC-workstation PC-workstation PC-workstation
Databases and
Software packages

Shared hard disk

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

Mainframe host system


1.2 Modulation
 Modulation

Process of changing baseband signals to facilitate


the transmission medium

 Process of modulation

 Frequency translation such as AM, FM, PM etc


 Sampling and coding such as PAM, PCM etc
 Keying such as ASK, FSK etc

21/01/25 32
1.2 Modulation

Baseband MODULATION Modulated


signal PROCESS signal

Carrier signal

“Modulation is the process of putting information onto a


high frequency carrier in a transmitter.”

21/01/25 33
1.2 Modulation
 Baseband Signal
 Base band signal is the modulating signal/original information

signal either in a digital or analog form (intelligent/message) in


communication system.
Example: voice signal (300Hz – 3400Hz)

 Transmission of original information whether analog or digital,


directly into transmission medium is called baseband
transmission.

 Modulated Signal
 Modulated signal is baseband signal which its original

frequency is shifted to higher frequency to facilitate


transmission purposes.
21/01/25 34
1.2 Modulation

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).
21/01/25 35
1.2 Modulation
 Types of modulation :

 Analogue modulations are frequency translation method


caused by changing the appropriate quantity in a carrier signal

 Digital modulation is the result of changing analogue signal


into binary ones by sampling and coding

 Keying modulations are digital signals subsequently


modulated by the frequency modulation by using one or other
analogue method

21/01/25 36
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

21/01/25 37
1.2 Modulation

21/01/25 38
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 

21/01/25 39
1.3 Parameters
Example 1: Convert 100W to dB and dBm.

Answer : dB = 10 log10 [100W/1W]


= 10(2)
= 20 dB

dBm = 10 log10 [100W/1mW]


= 10 log10 [100W/(1x10-3W]
= 10(5)
= 50 dBm
1.3 Parameters
Example 2: A measured value of 10mW will result in what dBm
power level?

Answer : dBm = 10 log10 [10mW/1mW]


= 10(1)
= 10 dBm
1.3 Parameters

Example 3: A laser diode outputs +10dBm. Convert this value to


Watts

Answer : dBm = 10 log 10 (x W/1mW)


10 = 10 log 10 (x W/1mW)
x W/1mW = 10(10/10)
x W = 10 (1mW)
x = 10 (1x10-3)
x = 0.01 Watts
1.3 Parameters
2) Bandwidth
 Bandwidth is the portion of the electromagnetic spectrum

occupied by a signal.
 Specifically, bandwidth is the difference between the upper

and lower frequency limits of the signal or the equipment


operation range.
 Figure below shows the bandwidth of the voice frequency

range from 300 to 3000Hz. The upper frequency is f2 and the


lower frequency is f1. The bandwidth, then is BW = f2 – f1

21/01/25 43
1.3 Parameters

• Bandwidth of an information signal is the difference between the


highest and lowest frequencies contained in the information.

• Bandwidth of a communication channel is the difference


between the highest and lowest frequencies that the channel will
allow signals to pass through it (ie: its pass band).

• Data rate proportional to bandwidth


1.3 Parameters
3) Rate of Communication
 Rate of information transfer is directly proportional with its

bandwidth.
 Shannon limit for information capacity, C

C = B log2 (1 + SNR) Shannon Hartley Theorem


= 3.32 B log10 (1 + SNR)

where C = information capacity (bps)


B = bandwidth (Hz)
SNR = signal to noise ratio (no unit)

21/01/25 45
1.3 Parameters

Example 4: For a standard telephone circuit with a SNR of 30dB


and a bandwidth of 2.7 kHz, determine the Shannon limit for
information capacity.

Answer : C = 3.32 B log10 (1+SNR)


= 3.32 (2.7x103) log10 (1+30)
= 13368.57 bps
= 13.368 kbps
1.3 Parameters

Example 5: The telephone channel has a bandwidth of about


3kHz. Calculate the capacity of a telephone channel that has an
SNR of 1023.

Answer : C = 3.32B log10 (1+SNR)


= 3.32 (3x103) log10 (1+1023)
= 29982.59 bps
= 29.983 kbps
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)

 Internal noise (produced by circuit component)

21/01/25 48
1.3 Parameters

Noise power is interfering and unwanted power in an electrical


device or system. is defined as :

N (Watt) = KTB
or
N(dBm) = 10log(KTB/1mW)

 K = Boltzmann’s Constant (1.38 x10-23 J/K)


 T = Temperature in Kelvin (273+ ???Celcius)
 B = Signal Bandwidth

21/01/25 49
Power Measurement (dB, dBm)
 The decibel (dB) is a transmission-measuring unit used to
express gain and losses an electronic devices and circuits

 for describing relationship between signal and noise


 dB  1W
 dBm  1mW
 example: 100W = 10 log10 100 = 20dB
= 10 log10 100 = 50 dBm
1mW

21/01/25 50
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

Where P1 = power level 1 (watts)


P2 = power level 2 (watts)
The dB value is the difference in dB between P1 and P2

21/01/25 51
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

Where Gain (dB) = power gain (dB)


Pout = output power level (watts)
Pin = input power level (watts)

Pout • (+) dB - power gain


 absolute power •output power is greater than input power
Pin • (-) dB power loss
•output power is less than input power

21/01/25 52
Power Measurement (dB, dBm)

1. Convert the absolute power ratio of 200 to a power gain in dB


Solution:
Power gain, Ap (dB) = 10 log10 [200]
= 10(2.3)
= 23 dB
2. Convert the power gain Ap = 23 dB to an absolute power ratio
Solution
Power gain, Ap (dB) = 10 log10 [Pout/Pin]
=
=
=
21/01/25 53
Electromagnetic Frequency Spectrum

 The electromagnetic frequency spectrum is divided into


 subsections, or bands, with each band having a different
name and boundary.

 The International Telecommunications Union (ITU) is an


international agency in control of allocating frequencies and
services within the overall frequency spectrum.

21/01/25 54
Electromagnetic Frequency Spectrum

• Electromagnetic waves are signals that oscillate; i.e the


amplitudes of the electric and magnetic fields vary at a specific
rate.
• These oscillation may occur at a very low frequency or at an
extremely high frequency.
• The range of electromagnetic signals encompassing all
frequencies is referred to as the electromagnetic spectrum.
21/01/25 56
Frequency and Wavelength

 A signal is located on EM spectrum according to its frequency &


wavelength

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

As speed of light = 3 × 108 meters/second

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

3 – 30 kHz VLF (very low freq) Ground wave


30 – 300 kHz LF (low freq)Ground wave
300 – 3000 kHz MF (medium freq) Ground wave/sky wave 3 – 30 MHz HF (high freq) Sky wave (Ionospheric)
30 – 300 MHz VHF (very high freq) Space wave (LOS)
300 – 3000 MHz UHF (ultrahigh freq) Space wave (LOS)
3 – 30 GHz SHF (superhigh freq) LOS/Satellite
30 – 300 GHz EHF (Extremely high freq) LOS/Satellite

International Telecommunications Union (ITU) Band Designation

21/01/25 60
4. Radio Communication System
 It is wireless communication system

 The information is being carried by the electromagnetic waves,


which is propagated in free space

 Electromagnetic waves are waves that travel at the speed of light


and made up of an electrical field and magnetic field at right
angles to one another and to the direction of propagation

21/01/25 61
4. Radio Communication System

Transmitting Receiving
antenna antenna

Transmitter Receiver

Block diagram of a radio communication system

21/01/25 62
4. Radio Communication System
 The three waves propagation methods:
 Ground wave propagation

 Sky wave propagation

 Space wave propagation

Sky wave propagation


Ionospheric layer
Space wave
propagation

Earth
Receiver
Transmitter
Fig: Radio wave propagation methods

21/01/25 63
4. Radio Communication System
There are three main type of propagations:

 Ground (space) wave propagation


 Dominants mode for frequencies below 2 MHz
 The movement tend to follow the contour of the earth with
large antenna size

 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.

21/01/25 64
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

 Space wave propagation (Line Of Sight)


 Dominants mode for frequencies above 30 MHz where in

propagates in straight line


 No refraction and can almost propagates through ionosphere

21/01/25 65
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

21/01/25 66
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

21/01/25 67
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

21/01/25 69
Applications of Telecommunications

Business
Telecommunications • Centralized
• Distributed
• Client/server
Telecommunications • Interorganizational
Architectures • Global
Electronic meeting
Electronic commu- Business process
systems
nications system systems

• Electronic mail • Desktop Video • Online transaction


• Voice mail conferencing processing
• Bulletin Board systems • Decision room • Inquiry/Response
• Videotex conferencing • EDI / XML
• Fascimile • Computer • Electronic Funds Transfer
• Public Information Service conferencing • Activity monitoring
• Teleconferencing • Process control
• Telecommuting
Trends
Industry trends

Towards a greater number of competitive vendors, carriers, alliances


and telecommunications network services.

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

Towards a pervasive use of the internet and enterprise and interorganizational


intranets, to support collaborative computing, online business operations and
strategic advantage in local and global markets.
Challenge

 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

21/01/25 73

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