Title: CS3502, Data and Computer Networks: the physical layer2
1CS3502,Data and Computer Networksthe physical
layer-2
2channel capacity
- channel - a path, contained in the transmission
medium, through which signals/bits may pass - a part of the medium, not all
- channel capacity - maximum number bits/sec the
channel can support - factors which determine channel capacity
- bandwidth
- number signal levels
- noise
3channel capacity
- basic channel capacity formulas
- 2 caseschannel requirement, channel capacity.
- Case 1 The channel capacity required to digitize
an analog signal which contains the highest
frequency Fmax - is given by the Nyquist formula
-
- R 2 Fmax log2 (V),
- where
- R channel requirement in bps,
- Fmax maximum frequency in hertz
- V signal levels
4channel capacity
- examples
- 1. Fmax 3100 Hz, 8 signal levels. What is R?
- A R 2(3100) log(8) 18,600 bps
- 2. R 60 Kbps, Fmax is 6000 Hz. How many signal
levels? - A ?
- 3. Fmax 10KHz, V is 16. What is R?
- A ?
5channel capacity
- Case 2 Channel Capacity with noise present.
Shannon formula. - C W log2 (1 S/N)
- where
- C channel capacity in bps
W band width in hz - S signal strength in Watts
N noise strength in Watts - Note 1 upper bound, independent of signal
levels. - Note 2 S/N often given in decibels if so, must
convert to - absolute ratio using the formula
- S/N dB 10 log10 (S/N)
6channel capacity
- example
- 1. 30 dB 10 log10 S/N --gt S/N 103
1000. - 2. S/N 500, C 1Mb/s. What bandwidth needed?
- A 1 Mb/s W log2 (1500), appr.
- 1000000 W (9)
- W 111111 Hz (approx)
- 3. S/N 40dB, W 6200 Hz.
- A 81,840 (approx.)
7channel capacity
- note 1 Shannon formulas is an upper bound
theoretical maximum. Actual data rates often much
less. - note 2 noise considered in Shannon is only
thermal noise no other type of noise. - note 3 data compression not considered. This can
raise the data limits considerably.
8transmission media
- Guided Media
- twisted pair (copper)
- coaxial cable (copper)
- optical fibers (silicon... plastic or glass)
- Unguided Media
- broadcast radio frequencies
- terrestrial microwave
- satellite microwave
- Note take the tables in Text on data rates, etc.
as a general guide, NOT as absolute truth
9transmission media twisted pair
- copper a good conductor of electricity
- (side note recent developments by IBM leading to
use of copper on ICs - better chips) - 2 copper wires used to form a circuit between
Xmitter, Rcvr - twisting gives better electrical properties
- backbone of the local telephone system
- also used for limited long distance telephones
- also heavily used in data comm., LANs
- used for both digital, analog signals
10transmission media twisted pair
- various quality levels voice grade, Cat 5
- data rates 1-100 Mbps, depending on quality
voice grade at low end, Cat 5 top end. - higher quality are more tightly twisted
- advantages
- mature - well known technology
- connections, splices easy
- production, installation techniques well known
- relatively cheap, easy to install
11transmission media twisted pair
- disadvantages
- cost of copper
- signal attenuation increases with frequency,
starting at low frequencies - often needs shield to reduce noise pickup
- susceptible to cross talk if lines close together
- susceptible to lightning strikes
- less bandwidth than most other media
- See text for further explanation
12transmission media coaxial cable
- a thick cable, consisting of an inner copper core
surrounded by an insulator, surrounded by another
conductor (braided shield), wrapped in a
protective shield and an outer cover. (see
diagram in text) - Properties (approx.)
- bandwidth 500Mhz, analog
- data rates 500 Mbps or more
- repeater spacing 1-10 Km
- Two basic types
- broadband
- baseband
13transmission media coaxial cable
- broadband TV cable, analog signals
- baseband LANs, digital signals
- Uses
- long distance telephone
- cable TV
- LANs
- Note higher capacity than t.p., but also much
bulkier and difficult to work with in limited
spaces
14transmission media coaxial cable
- advantages
- lower attenuation than t.p. at high frequencies
- wider usable bandwidth
- better isolation (less susceptible to
interference) - easy to tap
- disadvantages
- physically larger, bulky
- limited bending radius
- heavier
- fire code restrictions on materials
15transmission media optical fiber
- development of OF a major milestone in
communications made feasible by invention of
laser 1960 first fibers developed 1970 - twisted pair 19th century coax 1930 radio
1900 integrated circuits 1950... - since about 1988, majority of all U.S. long
distance traffic over OF, though only about 5 of
cable is OF. - due to OF, the networks have potential to be
faster than the computer ---- a big flip flop
16transmission media optical fiber
- A thin, flexible medium of extremely pure
plastic/glass. Thickness about 2-125 microns.
Core often 62.5 microns. - much higher data rates from 100M to several G.
- note prop. speed approximately 2/3 c, as with tp
and coax bits much smaller - repeater spacing much higher...
- FDDI, DQDB, and SONET all optical fiber standards
- principle each bit is transported by a tiny ray
of light(darkness), guided by the medium. - requires extremely accurate transmitters,
receivers much finer degree of synchronization
17transmission media optical fiber
- principle total internal reflection
- Two major types of fiber
- 1. multi-mode
- step index
- graded index
- 2. single mode/monomode
- limitations
- modal dispersion (multimode)
- material dispersion (single mode)
- attenuation (single mode, at very high data rates)
18transmission media optical fiber
- advantages
- much higher bandwidth, real and potential
- very low radiation, noise pickup shielding not
needed, crosstalk not a problem - very low attenuation, and little variation in
.85,1.3,and 1.55 micro- meter range - not susceptible to lightning, etc.
- small physical size and weight
- cost will decrease
- very difficult to tap
19transmission media optical fiber
- disadvantages
- cost
- technology less mature
- splicing difficult and critical
- installation more difficult
- Key note fiber has literally made the network
faster than the computer. We have far to go
before we reach the potential data rates of
fiber....
20unguided media broadcast radio TV
- lower frequency ranges roughly 30KHz-1GHz
- omni-directional
- data rates not as high as microwave, so less
useful for data, but good for broadcast radio - better propagation characteristics less
attenuation, less interference from rain, etc.
21unguided media
- lower frequency ranges broadcast radio
- 300-3000 kHz MF AM radio
- 3-30 MHz HF shortwave radio, CB
- 30-300 MHz VHF FM radio, VHF TV
- ...
- microwave frequency ranges 1 to 40 GHz
- infrared just below visible light frequency
1011 - 1014
22unguided media terrestrial microwave
- focused beam, 1-2 degrees
- high frequencies 3-40 GHz --gt high data rates
- paraboloid shaped antennas
- better repeater spacing than cable
- high data rates
- more susceptible to rain, clouds, dust, etc.
than others
23unguided media satellite microwave
- high frequency ( same as terr. uwave)
- geosynchronous satellite --gt repeater in sky
- broadcast media
- 22,300 miles --gt 35,000 Km
- receives, xmits on diff. frequencies to avoid
interference - need spacing of 4 deg. between satellites
- significant prop delay 250 ms
- less difficulty with atmosphere
- 3 major differences with terr. microwave