Fundamentals of Telecommunications: Ermanno Pietrosemoli Marco Zennaro
Fundamentals of Telecommunications: Ermanno Pietrosemoli Marco Zennaro
Fundamentals of Telecommunications: Ermanno Pietrosemoli Marco Zennaro
telecommunications
Ermanno Pietrosemoli
Marco Zennaro
Goals
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Basic Concepts
•Interference
•Signal
Analog, Digital, Random •Channel Capacity
•Sampling •BER
•Bandwidth •Modulation
•Spectrum •Multiplexing
•Noise •Duplexing
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Telecommunication Signals
Telecommunication signals are variation over
time of voltages, currents or light levels that
carry information.
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Examples of Signals
Random Signal
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Sinusoidal Signal
A
⊖ T
v(t)= A cos(wot - ⊖) 0 time
-A
A = Amplitude, volts
wo = 2πfo, angular frequency in radians
fo = frequency in Hz
T = period in seconds, T= 1/fo
⊖= Phase 7
Signals and Spectra
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Spectral analysis and filters
f3
f2
f1
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Sampling
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Why Digital?
Noise does not accumulate when you have a chain of devices like it
happens in an analog system: CD Versus Vinyl, VHS Vs DVD.
Digital signals can be encoded in ways that allow the recover from
transmission errors, albeit at the expense of throughput.
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Communication System
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Electrical Noise
•Noise poses the ultimate limit to the range of a communications
system
•Every component of the system introduces noise
•There are also external sources of noise, like atmospheric noise
and man made noise
•Thermal noise power (always present) is frequency independent
and is given (in watts) by k*T*B, where:
k is Boltzmann constant, 1.38x10-23 J/K
T is absolute temperature in kelvins (K) B is bandwidth in Hz
At 26 °C (T= 273.4+26) the noise power in dBm in 1 MHz is:
-174 +10*log10(B) = - 144 dBm
Signal Delay
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Attenuation
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Noise in an analog Signal
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Bandwidth Limitation
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Interference
Any signal different from the one that our system is designed
to receive that is captured by the receiver impairs the
communication and is called interference.
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Information Measurement
I = log2 (1/Pe)
The information carried by a signal is expressed in bits and is
proportional to the logarithm of the inverse of the
probability of the occurrence of the corresponding event.
The more unlikely an event to happen, the more information
its happening will carry.
Transmitting a message of an event that the receiver already
knows carries no information.
The amount of information transmitted in one second is the
capacity of the channel, expressed in bit/s.
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Redundancy
Sending twice the same information is a waste of the system
capacity that reduces the throughput.
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2
Channel Capacity
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Detection of a noisy signal
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MoDem
1 0 1 0 Transmission Medium 1 0 1 0
Mod -Dem
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Comparison of modulation techniques
1 0 1 0 Digital Sequence
ASK modulation
FSK modulation
PSK modulation
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Multiplexing
A A
Multiplexer ABCD Demultiplexer B
B
Communication Channel
C C
D D
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Medium sharing techniques
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Example:
U.S. Television Channels Allocation
Signal Power
54 60 66 72 76 82 frequency, MHz
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3
CDMA analogy
Two messages superposed,
one in yellow and one in
blue
A blue filter reveals what is
written in yellow
A yellow filter reveals what
is written in blue
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Duplexing
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Conclusions
The communication system must overcome the noise and
interference to deliver a suitable replica of the signal to the
receiver.
The capacity of the communication channel is proportional
to the bandwidth and to the logarithm of the S/N ratio.
Modulation is used to adapt the signal to the channel and to
allow several signals to share the same channel.
Higher order modulation schemes permit higher
transmission rates, but require higher S/N ratio.
The channel can be shared by several uses that occupy
different frequencies, different time slots or different codes
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Thank you for your attention