Wireless and Mobile Computing Transmission Fundamentals
Wireless and Mobile Computing Transmission Fundamentals
Transmission Fundamentals
Lecture 3
Overview
Signals for Conveying Information
Relationship between Data Rate and Bandwidth
Analog and Digital Data Transmission
Analog and Digital Data
Analog and Digital Signaling
Analog and Digital Transmission
Channel Capacity
Nyquist Bandwidth
Shannon Capacity Formula 1
Data Rate and Bandwidth
any transmission this limits the data
system has a rate that can be
limited band of carried on the
frequencies transmission
medium
square waves
limiting
most energy have infinite
bandwidth
in first few components and
creates
components hence an infinite
distortions
bandwidth
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Data Rate and Bandwidth.. cont.
Let us continue this process by
adding a sine wave of frequency 5f,
and then adding a sine wave of
frequency 7f, as shown in fig.
Additional odd multiples of f are
added, suitably scaled, the resulting
waveform approaches that of a
square wave more and more closely.
Frequency components of the square
wave with amplitudes A and -A can
be expressed as follows:
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Data Rate and Bandwidth..
Cont.
Case I: Bandwidth = 4 MHz; data rate = 2 Mbps
Case II: Bandwidth = 8 MHz; data rate = 4 Mbps
Case III: Bandwidth = 4 MHz; data rate = 4 Mbps
• Any digital waveform will have infinite bandwidth.
• If we attempt to transmit this waveform as a signal over any medium, the
transmission system will limit the bandwidth that can be transmitted.
• Furthermore, for any given medium, the greater the bandwidth
transmitted, the greater the cost.
• Thus, on the one hand, economic and practical reasons dictate that digital
information be approximated by a signal of limited bandwidth. On the
other hand, limiting the bandwidth creates distortions, which makes the
task of interpreting the received signal more difficult.
• The more limited the bandwidth, the greater the distortion and the greater
the potential for error by the receiver.
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Data Rate and Bandwidth..
Cont.
The bandwidth that can be transmitted is limited by the transmission
system (transmitter, medium, receiver)
The greater the bandwidth, the greater the cost
The narrower the bandwidth, the great the distortion (errors!)
Data rate = W bps Bandwidth = 2W Hz gives good presentation
The greater the bandwidth the higher the data rate
Keeping the same data rate:
Greater bandwidth better quality of the received signal
The higher center frequency the higher the potential bandwidth
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Data Transmission
The successful
transmission of
data depends on • characteristics of the
two factors: transmission
medium
Transmission Terminology
Communication is Unguided
in the form of Guided
media
electromagnetic media
(wireless)
waves.
twisted pair,
air, vacuum,
coaxial cable,
seawater
optical fiber
Data Communication Terms
Data - entities that convey meaning, or
information
Signals - electric or electromagnetic
representations of data
Transmission - communication of data by the
propagation and processing of signals
Examples of Analog and Digital Data
Analog
Video
Audio
Digital
Text
Integers
Analog Signals
A continuously varying electromagnetic wave that may
be propagated over a variety of media, depending on
frequency
Examples of media:
Copper wire media (twisted pair and coaxial cable)
Fiber optic cable
Atmosphere or space propagation
Analog signals can propagate analog and digital data
Digital Signals
A sequence of voltage pulses that may be
transmitted over a copper wire medium
Generally cheaper than analog signaling
Less susceptible to noise interference
Suffer more from attenuation
Digital signals can propagate analog and digital
data
Analog Signals
Digital data, analog signal:
Some transmission media,
such as optical fiber and
satellite, will only propagate
analog signals.
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Digital Signals
Digital data, digital
signal: In general, the
equipment for encoding
digital data into a digital
signal is less complex and
less expensive than digital-
to analog Equipment.
Analog data, digital
signal: Conversion of
analog data to digital form
permits the use of modern
digital transmission and
switching equipment for
analog data.
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Reasons for Choosing Data and
Signal Combinations
Digital data, digital signal
Equipment for encoding is less expensive than
digital-to-analog equipment
Analog data, digital signal
Conversion permits use of modern digital
transmission and switching equipment
Digital data, analog signal
Some transmission media will only propagate
analog signals
Examples include optical fiber and satellite
Analog data, analog signal
Analog data easily converted to analog signal
Analog and
Digital
Transmission
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Analog Transmission
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ATTENUATION
Equalize Received signal
attenuation across strength must be:
the band of •strong enough to be
frequencies used detected
by using loading •sufficiently higher
than noise to be
coils or amplifiers. received without error
Strength can be
increased using
amplifiers or
repeaters.
Intermodulation noise
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Concepts Related to Channel
Capacity
Data rate - rate at which data can be
communicated (bps)
Bandwidth - the bandwidth of the transmitted
signal as constrained by the transmitter and
the nature of the transmission medium
(Hertz)
Noise - average level of noise over the
communications path
Error rate - rate at which errors occur
Error = transmit 1 and receive 0; transmit 0 and
receive 1
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Channel Capacity
Maximum rate at which data can be transmitted over
a given communications channel under given
conditions
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Two Formulas
Problem: given a bandwidth, what data rate can we
achieve?
Nyquist Formula
Assume noise free
delay distortion.
Given binary signal (two voltage levels), the maximum data rate
supported by B Hz is 2B bps.
One signal represents one bit 31
Nyquist Formula
Signals with more than two levels can be used, i.e., each signal
element can represent more than one bit.
E.g., if a signal has 4 different levels, then a signal can be used to represents two
bits: 00, 01, 10, 11
With multilevel signaling, the Nyquist formula becomes:
C = 2B log2M
M is the number of discrete signal levels, B is the given bandwidth, C is the
channel capacity in bps.
How large can M be?
The receiver must distinguish one of M possible signal elements.
Noise and other impairments on the transmission line will limit the practical value of
M.
Nyquist’s formula indicates that, if all other things are equal, doubling
the bandwidth doubles the data rate.
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Shannon Capacity Formula
Now consider the relationship among data rate, noise, and error rate.
Faster data rate shortens each bit, so burst of noise affects more bits
At given noise level, higher data rate results in higher error rate
All of these concepts can be tied together neatly in a formula developed by Claude
Shannon.
For a given level of noise, we would expect that a greater signal strength would improve
the ability to receive data correctly.
The key parameter is the SNR: Signal-to-Noise Ratio, which is the ratio of the power in a
signal to the power contained in the noise.
Typically, SNR is measured at receiver, because it is the receiver that processes the
signal and recovers the data.
For convenience, this ratio is often reported in decibels
SNR = signal power / noise power
SNRdb= 10 log10 (SNR)
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Shannon Capacity Formula
Shannon Capacity Formula:
C = B log2(1+SNR)
Only white noise is assumed. Therefore it represents the theoretical maximum
that can be achieved.
This is referred to as error-free capacity.
Some remarks:
Given a level of noise, the data rate could be increased by increasing either
signal strength or bandwidth.
As the signal strength increases, so do the effects of nonlinearities in the system
which leads to an increase in intermodulation noise.
Because noise is assumed to be white, the wider the bandwidth, the more noise
is admitted to the system. Thus, as B increases, SNR decreases.
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Conclusion
Relationship between data rate and bandwidth
Transmission Terminologies
Transmission impairments
Attenuation/delay distortion/noise
Channel capacity
Nyquist/Shannon
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