Chapter 1 - 2
Chapter 1 - 2
Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION TO COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
(Eq. 1)
(Eq. 2)
(Eq. 3)
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1.2 SNR, Bandwidth & Rate of Communication
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Example:
A laser diode launched a 33dBm optical power
level into a fiber flylead.
i. Convert this value to both in dB and Watt.
ii. The optical signal travels along 60km distance with
power loss of 0.3dB per kilometer. Determine the
received optical power level in Watt and dB.
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1.2 SNR, Bandwidth & Rate of Communication
2. Bandwidth
Bandwidth is that portion of the electromagnetic spectrum
occupied by a signal.
Specifically, bandwidth is the difference between the upper
and lower frequency limits of the signal or the equipment
operation range.
Figure 1, shows the bandwidth of the voice frequency range
from 300 to 3000Hz. The upper frequency is f2 and the
lower frequency is f1. The bandwidth, then is
BW = f2 – f1
WHAT IS BANDWIDTH ?
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1.2 SNR, Bandwidth & Rate of Communication
2. Bandwidth
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1.2 SNR, Bandwidth & Rate of Communication
3. Rate of Communication
Rate of information transmission is directly
proportional with its bandwidth
Shannon limit for information capacity, C
C = B log2 (1 + SNR)
= 3.32B log10 (1 + SNR)
Where C = information capacity (bps)
B = bandwidth (Hz)
SNR = signal to noise ratio (no unit)
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1.2 SNR, Bandwidth & Rate of Communication
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Example:
A typical SNR value for data transmission through fiber
optic cable is 18dB. Determine the information capacity if
the optical channel bandwidth is 100 GHz.
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