Title: Fall 2005 Long Distance Communication Carriers, Modulation, And Modems
1Fall 2005Long Distance Communication
Carriers, Modulation, And Modems
- Qutaibah Malluhi
- Computer Science and Engineering
- Qatar University
2Long-Distance Communication
- Encoding used by RS-232 cannot work in all
situations - For example, can not work over long distances
- Signal loss over long distance
- Electric current attenuates (becomes weaker) as
it travels on wire - Resulting signal loss may prevent accurate
decoding of data - Therefore, Encoding bits by voltage levels (like
in RS-232) does not work for long distance
communication - Different data encoding schemes are needed
3Long Distance Communication
- Important fact an oscillating signal travels
further than direct current - For long-distance communication
- Send a sine wave (called a carrier wave)
- Change (modulate) the carrier to encode data bits
- Extract bits from the modulated wave by a
demodulator at the receiving destination
4Illustration Of A Carrier
- Carrier
- Usually a sine wave
- Oscillates continuously
- Frequency of carrier fixed
- Carrier can travel over much longer distances
than RS-232 signal
5Characteristics of a Carrier
- Amplitude height of wave
- Volts, amps, or watts
- Frequency - of times signals make complete
cycle - expressed in hertz (Hz)
- Phase position of waveform
6Amplitude
7Frequency and Period
- Frequency is the rate of change with respect to
time. Change in a short span of time means high
frequency. Change over a long span of time means
low frequency. - Frequency and period are the inverse of each
other - Period is measured in seconds while frequency
measured in Hertz (HZ) - E.g. period 1 millisecond ? frequency 1 Khz
8Phase
- Phase describes the position of the waveform
relative to time zero.
9Sign Wave Examples
10Encoding Data With A Carrier
- Called modulation (or Shift Keying)
- Modifications to basic carrier encode data for
transmission - Modulated carrier technique used for radio and
television - Modulation is used with all types of media
- copper, fiber, radio, infrared, laser
11Types of Modulation
- Amplitude modulation
- Encode (modulate) data by changing the strength,
or amplitude of the carrier - Frequency modulation
- Encode data by changing the frequency of the
carrier - Phase shift modulation
- Encode data by changing the timing, or performing
phase shifts on the carrier - Example Two modulation techniques for radio are
frequency modulation (FM) and amplitude
modulation (AM)
12Example Of Amplitude Modulation
- Strength of signal encodes 0 or 1
- One cycle of wave needed for each bit
- Data rate limited by carrier bandwidth
- Simple but less efficient
- more susceptible to noise errors
13Example of Frequency Modulation
- Frequency variation of signal encodes 0 and 1
- Frequency of times signals make complete cycle
- Frequency expressed in hertz (Hz)
- Does not suffer from sudden noise spikes
14Phase-Shift Example
- Phase position of waveform
- Section of wave is omitted at phase shift
- Data bits determine size of omitted section
15Example of Phase-Shift Modulation
- Change in phase encodes K bits
- Data rate higher than carrier bandwidth
- For example, if 4 possible shifts can be detected
by hardware, each shift value can encode 2 bits - Bit rate 2 baud rate
16Phase-Shift Modulation with 4 Shift levels
17Modem
- Sending digital data using analog signal requires
modulation - Modulator encodes data bits as modulated carrier
- Demodulator decodes bits from carrier
- Requires a hardware device called modem
- modulator/demodulator
- Contains separate circuitry for
- Modulation of outgoing signal
- Demodulation of incoming signal
18Full Duplex Communication
- Bidirectional, or full duplex, transmission is
needed - Requires modulator and demodulator at both
endpoints - One modem at each end
- Modulator on one modem connects to demodulator on
other - Separate wires carry signals in each direction
- Long-distance connection requires a 4-wire
circuit
19Modem Examples
- If external modem, RS-232 can be used to connect
computer to modem - If internal modem, system bus is used
20Other Types of Modems
- ISDN modem
- Cable modem
- Coax connector for cable and 10Base-T connector
for computer
21Operation of Dialup Modems
- Receiving modem waits for call in answer mode
Other modem, in call mode - Simulates lifting handset
- Listens for dial tone
- Sends tones (or pulses) to dial number
- Answering modem
- Detects ringing
- Simulates lifting handset
- Sends carrier
- Calling modem
- Sends carrier
- Data exchanged
22Multiplexing
- Allow multiple channels/users share link capacity
- Fundamental to networking
- Multiple signals encoding data can be carried on
same medium without interference - Allows multiple simultaneous data streams
- Example - Dialup modems can carry full-duplex
data on one voice channel - Example - multiple TV stations in air medium
- Each separate signal is called a channel
23Types Of Multiplexing
- Time Division Multiplexing (TDM)
- Statistical Time Division Multiplexing (STDM)
- Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM)
- Spread Spectrum Multiplexing
- Wave Division Multiplexing (WDM)
24Time Division Multiplexing (TDM)
- Use a single carrier and sends data streams
sequentially - Only one item at a time on shared channel
- Each channel allowed to be carried during
pre-assigned timeslots only - Basis for most computer networks that use shared
media - will give details in later chapters - Pros fair, simple to implement
- Cons inefficient (i.e., empty slots when user
has no data)
25TDM Illustrated
26Empty Timeslots in TDM
27Statistical Time Division Multiplexing (STDM)
- Each timeslot is allocated on a demand basis
(dynamically). - Example ATM
- Pros improved performance
- Cons requires buffering when aggregate input
load exceeds link capacity
28Basic Principle behind FDM
- Two or more signals that use different carrier
frequencies can be transmitted over a single
medium simultaneously without interference - Note this is the same principle that allows a
cable TV company to send multiple television
signals across a single cable
29Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM)
- Multiple items transmitted simultaneously
- Each channel is allocated a particular carrier
frequency (called bands). - Frequencies must be separated to avoid
interference - All (modulated) signals are carried
simultaneously (as a composite analog signal) - Receiver can "tune" to specific frequency and
extract modulation for that one channel
30FDM Demonstrated
31Spread Spectrum Multiplexing
- Spread spectrum uses multiple carriers
concurrently - Single data stream divided up and sent across
different carriers - Can be used to bypass interference or avoid
wiretapping
32Wave Division Multiplexing (WDM)
- Facts
- FDM can be used with any electromagnetic
radiation - Light is electromagnetic radiation
- When applied to light, FDM is called wave
division multiplexing
33Summary
- Various transmission schemes and media available
- Electrical current over copper
- Light over glass
- Electromagnetic waves
- Digital encoding used for data
- Asynchronous communication
- Used for keyboards and serial ports
- RS-232 is standard
- Sender and receiver agree on baud rate
34Summary (contd)
- Modems
- Used for long-distance communication
- Available for copper, optical fiber, dialup
- Transmit modulated carrier
- Phase-shift modulation popular
- Frequency modulation and amplitude modulation are
other examples
35Summary (contd)
- Multiplexing
- Fundamental concept
- Used at many levels
- Applied in both hardware and software
- Three basic types
- Time-division multiplexing (TDM)
- Frequency-division multiplexing (FDM)
- Statistical time-division multiplexing (STDM)
- When applied to light, FDM is called
wave-division multiplexing