EECS 307: Communication Systems: Week 1 Refik Caglar Kizilirmak Nazarbayev University
EECS 307: Communication Systems: Week 1 Refik Caglar Kizilirmak Nazarbayev University
Communication systems
Week 1
Refik Caglar Kizilirmak
Nazarbayev University
Telecommunications
Transmission of signals over a distance for the
purpose of communication.
The word telecommunication is a
compound of the Greek prefix tele, meaning
'far off', and communication, meaning 'to
transfer information'.
Telegraph, telephone, television etc.
Telecommunications
Communication systems have 3 parts:
Transmitter
Physical Medium
Receiver
Telegraph
1854 25,000 miles of telegraph wires have been
laid across the US.
Train schedules, weather, important news
Very costly
Communication System
Communication involves the transmission of
information signal from one point to another
through a successive process.
Communication System
Transmitter converts message signal (from
source of information) into a form of suitable
for transmission.
Received signal is corrupted by the noise and
other interferers.
Received signal is the corrupted version of
transmission signal.
Receiver has to reconstruct the original
message signal.
1) Broadcasting:
Single powerful transmitter and a numerous
receivers. Single message signal is transmitted
and received by all the receivers. One-way
transmission.
2) Point-to-Point:
Communication takes place over a link between
a signal transmitter and a receiver. Usually bidirectional.
Primary Resources
Channel Bandwidth
Transmitted Power
Noise
SNR
Signal-to-noise ratio, usually defined in dB.
dB is not a unit. It defines the ratio.
more on dB..
1 mW = 0 dBm
1000 mW = (0 + 30) 30 dBm
2000 mW = 10log1000 + 10log2 = (30 + 3)dBm
500 mW = 10log1000 10log2 = (30-3) dBm
1000 mW = 1 W = 0 dBW
[dBm] = [dBW] + 30
Sources of Information
Source of information is characterized in
terms of a signal that carriers the information.
Signal is electrical current or voltage that
conveys information. It can be onedimensional (audio, computer data) or twodimensional (picture, image, video).
Speech signal
Human speech ranges from a few hundred Hz
to a thousand Hz.
Soprano 250 Hz 1KHz
Contralto 200 Hz 700 Hz
Baritone 110 Hz 425 Hz
Bass 80 Hz 350 Hz
Music Signal
Human ear can hear frequencies from 20 Hz
to 15 KHz.
Flute 250 Hz 2.5 Khz
Piccolo 630 Hz 5 Khz
Percussion 260 Hz 3.5 KHz
http://www.falstad.com/fourier/
Communication Network
OSI model composed of seven layers. We will
focus on Physical layer.
Communication Channels
Transmission of information in the physical
layer is accomplished in the physical layer by
means of communication channel.
1) Guided propagation (telephone lines, coaxial
cables, optical fibers)
2) Free propagation (wireless broadcast
channels, mobile communications, satellite )
Communication Channel
(Abstract Model)
Scaling property
x
linear
y
4.x
y = 4x
non-linear
x
We will talk more about linear systems.
4.x+2
y = 4x+2
x(t-t0)
y(t)
y(t-t0)
We will talk more about time invariance when we talk about linear-time-invariant (LTI) systems.
Modulation Process
Transmitter modifies the message signal into a
form suitable for transmission over the
channel.
This modification is known as modulation,
which involves varying some parameters of
the carrier signal.
Receiver reconstructs the message signal from
the transmitted waveform. This process is
called demodulation.
1) Continuous-wave modulation
sine wave carrier is used.
Amplitude modulation (AM)
Phase modulation (PM)
Frequency modulation (FM)
2) Pulse-wave modulation
Sequence of pulses are used as carrier
Pulse amplitude modulation (PAM)
Pulse duration/width/length modulation
(PDM/PWM/PLM)
Pulse position/place modulation (PPM)
CW Modulation
A message can be modulated on amplitude,
frequency, phase or combination of these.
Message signal
Pulse-wave modulation
Sequence of pulses are used to modulate the
message.
Message signal
Multiplexing
Multiplexing is the process of combining
several message signals for their simultaneous
transmission over the same channel.
Multiplexing
Frequency division multiplexing (FDM)
Time division multiplexing (TDM)
Code division multiplexing (CDM)
Wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) is
form FDM since wavelength is reciprocal with
frequency.
C: capacity (bit/sec)
B: bandwidth (Hz)
S/N : signal-to-noise ratio (SNR)
Claude Shannon