Lecture 3 - Radio Physics
Lecture 3 - Radio Physics
Devices
Lecture 3 – Radio Physics
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What is a Wave?
• Example of oscillations: a pendulum, a tree swaying in the
wind, the string of a guitar
• A singer singing creates periodic oscillations in his or her
vocal cords.
• Compress and decompress the air
• Change of air pressure then leaves the singers mouth
• Travels, at the speed of sound.
• A stone plunging into a lake causes a disturbance, which
then travels across the lake as a wave.
• Waves in water are easy to visualize; drop a stone into the
lake and you can see the waves
• In the case of electromagnetic waves, “What is it that is
oscillating?”
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Electromagnetic Waves
‣ Characteristic wavelength, frequency, and amplitude
‣ No need for a carrier medium
‣ Examples: light, Xrays and radio waves
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Quick review of unit prefixes
Powers of ten
Nano- 10-9 1/1000000000 n
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/1203/scaleofuniverse_huang.swf
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Wavelength and Frequency
c=f*λ
c = speed (meters / second)
λ = wavelength (meters)
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Wavelength and Frequency
Since the speed of light is approximately 3 x 108 m/s, we
can calculate the wavelength for a given frequency.
Let us take the example of the frequency of 802.11b/g
wireless networking, which is:
f = 2.4 GHz
= 2,400,000,000 cycles / second
wavelength (λ) = c / f
= ???
wavelength (λ) = c / f
= 3 * 108 m/s / 2.4 * 109 s-1
= 1.25 * 10-1 m
= 12.5 cm
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Electromagnetic Spectrum
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Behavior of radio waves
‣ There are a few simple rules of thumb
that can prove extremely useful when
making first plans for a wireless
network:
‣ The longer the wavelength, the
further it goes
‣ The longer the wavelength, the
better it travels through and around
things
‣ The shorter the wavelength, the
more data it can transport 5 meter long wave
traveling through boat
‣ All of these rules, simplified as they may (50 m) vs. 50 cm log
be, are rather easy to understand by
example
Behavior of radio waves
• It is harder to visualize waves moving “through” solid objects, but
this is the case with electromagnetic waves.
• Longer wavelength (lower frequency) waves tend to penetrate
objects better than shorter wavelength (higher frequency) waves.
• FM radio (88-108MHz) can travel through buildings and other
obstacles easily, while shorter waves (such as GSM phones
operating at 900MHz or 1800MHz) have a harder time
penetrating buildings.
• Partly due to the difference in power levels used and shorter
wavelength of FM/GSM signals.
• The faster the wave swings or beats, the more information it can
carry - every beat or cycle could for example be used to transport
a digital bit, a '0' or a '1', a 'yes' or a 'no'.
Activity 2: Network Signal in an Elevator
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Absorption
When electromagnetic waves go through some material,
they generally get weakened or dampened.
Materials that absorb energy include:
‣ Metal. Electrons can move freely in metals, and are
readily able to swing and thus absorb the energy of a
passing wave.
‣ Water molecules jostle around in the presence of
radio waves, thus absorbing some energy.
‣ Trees and wood absorb radio energy proportionally to
the amount of water contained in them.
‣ Humans are mostly water: we absorb radio energy
quite well!
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Absorption
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Reflection
• Although the rules of reflection are quite simple, things can
become very complicated when you imagine an office interior
with many small metal objects of various complicated shapes.
• The same goes for urban situations: look around you in city
environment and try to spot all of the metal objects.
• This explains why multipath effects (i.e. signal reaching their
target along different paths, and therefore at different times)
play such an important role in wireless networking.
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Reflection
• We use reflection to our advantage in antenna: e.g. we put
huge parabolas behind our radio transmitter/receiver to collect
and bundle the radio signal into a fine point.
• Big metallic panels can be used as passive radio reflectors to
cover areas that cannot be normally reached using a straight
path, this is sometimes done to increase the TV coverage in
mountain and valley areas.
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Diffraction
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Diffraction
• Microwaves, with a wavelength of several centimeters, will
show the effects of diffraction when waves hit walls,
mountain peaks, and other obstacles.
• It seems as if the obstruction causes the wave to change its
direction and go around corners.
• Note that diffraction comes at the cost of power: the
energy of the diffracted wave is significantly less than that
of the wavefront that caused it.
• But in some very specific applications, you can take
advantage of the diffraction effect to circumvent
obstacles.
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Refraction
Refraction is the apparent “bending” of waves when they meet a
material with different characteristics.When a wave moves from
one medium to another, it changes speed and direction upon
entering the new medium.
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Other important wave properties
These properties are also important to consider when
using electromagnetic waves for communications.
‣ Phase
‣ Polarization
‣ Fresnel Zone
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Phase
The phase of a wave is the fraction
of a cycle that the wave is offset
from a reference point. It is a
relative measurement that can be
express in different ways (radians,
cycles, degrees, percentage).
Two waves that have the same
frequency and different phases
have a phase difference, and the
waves are said to be out of phase
with each other.
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Interference
When two waves of the same frequency, amplitude and phase meet, the
result is constructive interference: the amplitude doubles.
When two waves of the same frequency and amplitude and opposite phase
meet, the result is destructive interference: the wave is annihilated.
Interference also happens when two or more waves of different frequencies
meet together: the results are simply more complex and difficult to visualize
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Polarization
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Conclusions
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Thank you for your attention