Assignment - 1 UNIT-1 Data & Computer Communication: Message: Sender: - Receiver: .. Transmission Medium
Assignment - 1 UNIT-1 Data & Computer Communication: Message: Sender: - Receiver: .. Transmission Medium
Assignment - 1 UNIT-1 Data & Computer Communication: Message: Sender: - Receiver: .. Transmission Medium
UNIT-1
DATA & COMPUTER COMMUNICATION
Que 2) Identify the five components of data communications system ?
A data communications system has five components:
Rule 1:
Rule 2:
Protocol
Protocol
Rule n:
Rule 1:
Rule 2:
Rule n:
SENDE
R
RECEIV
ER
1. Message: The message is the information (data) to be communicated. Popular
forms of information include text, numbers, pictures, audio, and video.
2. Sender: The sender is the device that sends the data message. It can be a computer,
Workstation, telephone handset, video camera, and so on.
3.
Receiver: The receiver is the device that receives the message. It can be a computer,
workstation, telephone handset, television, and so on.
4.. Transmission medium: The transmission medium is the physical path by which
a message travels from sender to receiver. Some examples of transmission media
include twisted-pair wire, coaxial cable, fiber-optic cable, and radio waves.
directions on a signal carrier, but not at the same time. For example, on a local area network
using a technology that has half-duplex transmission, one workstation can send data on the line
and then immediately receive data on the line from the same direction in which data was just
transmitted.
Full-Duplex: Full-duplex data transmission means that data can be transmitted in both directions
on a signal carrier at the same time. For example, on a local area network with a technology that
has full-duplex transmission, one workstation can be sending data on the line while another
workstation is receiving data. A full-duplex link can only connect two devices, so many such
links are required if multiple devices are to be connected together.
that allows the simultaneous transmission of multiple signals across a single data link.As data and
telecommunications use increases, so does traffic. We can accommodate this increase by continuing
to add individual links each time a new channel is needed, or we can install higher-bandwidth links
and use each to carry multiple signals. A generic term for such sharing is called multiplexing.
In a multiplexed system, n lines share the bandwidth of one link
The lines on the left direct their transmission
streams to a multiplexer (MUX), which combines them into a single stream (many-toone).
At the receiving end, that stream is fed into a demultiplexer (DEMUX), which
separates the stream back into its component transmissions (one-to-many) and directs them to
their corresponding lines.
Multiplexing Process
In multiplexing process. Each source generates a signal of a similar frequency range. Inside the
multiplexer, these similar signals modulates different carrier frequencies (f1,f2, and f3). The
resulting modulated signals are then combined into a single composite signal that is sent out over
a media link that has enough bandwidth to accommodate it.
Demultiplexing Process
The demultiplexer uses a series of filters to decompose the multiplexed signal into its constituent
component signals. The individual signals are then passed to a demodulator that separates them from
their carriers and passes them to the output lines.
Wavelength-Division Multiplexing
Wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM) is designed to use the high-data-rate capability of
fiber-optic cable. The optical fiber data rate is higher than the data rate of metallic transmission
cable. Using a fiber-optic cable for one single line wastes the available bandwidth. Multiplexing
allows us to combine several lines into one. WDM is conceptually the same as FDM, except that
the multiplexing and demultiplexing involve optical signals transmitted through fiber-optic
channels. The idea is the same: We are combining different signals of different frequencies. The
difference is that the frequencies are very high and At the receiver, the signals are separated by
the demultiplexer.
the medium exceeds the data rate of digital signals to b transmitted. Multiple digital signals can
be carried on a single transmission path by interleaving portions of each signal in time. The
Interleaving can be at the bit level or in blocks of bytes or larger quantities.
Que8) Difference between Frequency-Division Multiplexing and Time- Division Multiplexing?
Difference No. 1
TDM: Total available time is divided into several user
FDM: total frequency bands are divided into several users
Difference No. 2
FDM: A multiplex system for transmitting two or more signals over a common path by using a
different frequency band for each signal.
TDM: Transmission of two or more signals on the same path, but at different times.
Difference No. 3
TDM: TDM imply partitioning the bandwidth of the channel connecting two nodes into finite set
of time slots
FDM: The signals multiplexed come from different sources/transmitters.