Title: ICSA 411: Week 2 Data Transmission
1ICSA 411 Week 2Data Transmission
- Elizabeth Lane Lawley, Instructor
2Electromagnetic Signals
- Function of time
- Analog (varies smoothly over time)
- Digital (constant level over time, followed by a
change to another level) - Function of frequency (more important)
- Spectrum (range of frequencies)
- Bandwidth (width of the spectrum)
3Periodic Signal Characteristics
- Amplitude (A) signal value, measured in volts
- Frequency (f) repetition rate, cycles per second
or Hertz - Period (T) amount of time it takes for one
repetition, T1/f - Phase (F) relative position in time, measured in
degrees
4Bandwidth
- Width of the spectrum of frequencies that can be
transmitted - if spectrum300 to 3400Hz, bandwidth3100Hz
- Greater bandwidth leads to greater costs
- Limited bandwidth leads to distortion
5Why Study Analog in a Data Comm Class?
- Much of our data begins in analog form must
understand it in order to properly convert it - Telephone system is primarily analog rather than
digital (designed to carry voice signals) - Low-cost, ubiquitous transmission medium
- If we can convert digital information (1s and 0s)
to analog form (audible tone), it can be
transmitted inexpensively
6Data vs Signals
- Analog data
- Voice
- Images
- Digital data
- Text
- Digitized voice or images
7Analog Signaling
- represented by sine waves
phase difference
1 cycle
amplitude (volts)
time
(sec)
frequency (hertz)
cycles per second
8Voice/Audio Analog Signals
- Easily converted from sound frequencies (measured
in loudness/db) to electromagnetic frequencies,
measured in voltage - Human voice has frequency components ranging from
20Hz to 20kHz - For practical purposes, the telephone system has
a narrower bandwidth than human voice, from 300
to 3400Hz
9Image/Video Analog Data to Analog Signals
- Image is scanned in lines each line is displayed
with varying levels of intensity - Requires approximately 4Mhz of analog bandwidth
- Since multiple signals can be sent via the same
channel, guardbands are necessary, raising
bandwidth requirements to 6Mhz per signal
10Data Analog Signals
- Requires conversion from digital data to analog
signal - Discussed in more detail later tonight
11Digital Signaling
- represented by square waves or pulses
1 cycle
amplitude (volts)
time
(sec)
frequency (hertz)
cycles per second
12Digital Text Signals
- Transmission of electronic pulses representing
the binary digits 1 and 0 - How do we represent letters, numbers, characters
in binary form? - Earliest example Morse code (dots and dashes)
- Most common current form ASCII
13ASCII Character Codes
- Used to represent alphanumeric characters
- Use 7 bits of data to transmit one character
- 7 bits have 128 possible outcomes (0 to 127)
- Most characters are stored and transmitted using
8 bits - In communication, the eighth bit is used as a
parity bit for error correction - In applications, use of an eighth bit allows
high-order bit characters, such as diacritics
and symbols
14Digital Image Signals
- Analog facsimile
- similar to video scanning
- Digital facsimile, bitmapped graphics
- uses pixelization
- Object-oriented graphics
- image represented using library of objects
- e.g. Postscript, TIFF
15Pixelization and Binary Representation
- Used in digital fax, bitmapped graphics
1-bit code 00000000 00111100 01110110 0111
1110 01111000 01111110 00111100 00000000
16Transmission Media
- the physical path between transmitter and
receiver (channel) - design factors affecting data rate
- bandwidth
- physical environment
- number of receivers
- impairments
17Electromagnetic Spectrum for Transmission Media
18Impairments and Capacity
- Impairments exist in all forms of data
transmission - Analog signal impairments result in random
modifications that impair signal quality - Digital signal impairments result in bit errors
(1s and 0s transposed)
19Transmission Impairments
- Attenuation
- loss of signal strength over distance
- Attenuation Distortion
- different losses at different frequencies
- Delay Distortion
- different speeds for different frequencies
- occurs only in guided media
- Noise
- distortions of signal caused by interference
20Types of Noise
- Thermal (aka white noise)
- Uniformly distributed, cannot be eliminated
- Intermodulation
- When different frequencies collide (creating
harmonics) - Crosstalk
- Overlap of signals
- Impulse noise
- Irregular spikes, less predictable
21Classes of Transmission Media
- Conducted or guided media
- use a conductor such as a wire or a fiber optic
cable to move the signal from sender to receiver - Wireless or unguided media
- use radio waves of different frequencies and do
not need a wire or cable conductor to transmit
signals
22Guided Transmission Media
- Transmission capacity depends on the distance and
on whether the medium is point-to-point or
multipoint - Examples
- twisted pair wires
- coaxial cables
- optical fiber
23Twisted Pair Wires
- Consists of two insulated copper wires arranged
in a regular spiral pattern to minimize the
electromagnetic interference between adjacent
pairs - Often used at customer facilities and also over
distances to carry voice as well as data
communications - Low frequency transmission medium
24Types of Twisted Pair
- STP (shielded twisted pair)
- the pair is wrapped with metallic foil or braid
to insulate the pair from electromagnetic
interference - UTP (unshielded twisted pair)
- each wire is insulated with plastic wrap, but the
pair is encased in an outer covering
25Ratings of Twisted Pair
- Category 3 UTP
- data rates of up to 16mbps are achievable
- Category 5 UTP
- data rates of up to 100mbps are achievable
- more tightly twisted than Category 3 cables
- more expensive, but better performance
- STP
- More expensive, harder to work with
26Twisted Pair Advantages
- Inexpensive and readily available
- Flexible and light weight
- Easy to work with and install
27Twisted Pair Disadvantages
- Susceptibility to interference and noise
- Attenuation problem
- For analog, repeaters needed every 5-6km
- For digital, repeaters needed every 2-3km
- Relatively low bandwidth (3000Hz)
28Coaxial Cable (or Coax)
- Used for cable television, LANs, telephony
- Has an inner conductor surrounded by a braided
mesh - Both conductors share a common center axial,
hence the term co-axial
29Coax Layers
outer jacket (polyethylene)
shield(braided wire)
insulating material
copper or aluminum conductor
30Coax Advantages
- Higher bandwidth
- 400 to 600Mhz
- up to 10,800 voice conversations
- Can be tapped easily (pros and cons)
- Much less susceptible to interference than
twisted pair
31Coax Disadvantages
- High attenuation rate makes it expensive over
long distance - Bulky
32Fiber Optic Cable
- Relatively new transmission medium used by
telephone companies in place of long-distance
trunk lines - Also used by private companies in implementing
local data communications networks - Require a light source with injection laser diode
(ILD) or light-emitting diodes (LED)
33Fiber Optic Layers
- consists of three concentric sections
34Fiber Optic Types
- multimode step-index fiber
- the reflective walls of the fiber move the light
pulses to the receiver - multimode graded-index fiber
- acts to refract the light toward the center of
the fiber by variations in the density - single mode fiber
- the light is guided down the center of an
extremely narrow core
35Fiber Optic Signals
fiber optic multimode step-index
fiber optic multimode graded-index
fiber optic single mode
36Fiber Optic Advantages
- greater capacity (bandwidth of up to 2 Gbps)
- smaller size and lighter weight
- lower attenuation
- immunity to environmental interference
- highly secure due to tap difficulty and lack of
signal radiation
37Fiber Optic Disadvantages
- expensive over short distance
- requires highly skilled installers
- adding additional nodes is difficult
38Wireless (Unguided Media) Transmission
- transmission and reception are achieved by means
of an antenna - directional
- transmitting antenna puts out focused beam
- transmitter and receiver must be aligned
- omnidirectional
- signal spreads out in all directions
- can be received by many antennas
39Wireless Examples
- terrestrial microwave transmission
- satellite transmission
- broadcast radio
- infrared
40Terrestrial Microwave Transmission
- uses the radio frequency spectrum, commonly from
2 to 40 Ghz - transmitter is a parabolic dish, mounted as high
as possible - used by common carriers as well as by private
networks - requires unobstructed line of sight between
source and receiver - curvature of the earth requires stations (called
repeaters) to be 30 miles apart
41Microwave Transmission Applications
- long-haul telecommunications service for both
voice and television transmission - short point-to-point links between buildings for
closed-circuit TV or a data link between LANs - bypass application
42Microwave Transmission Advantages
- no cabling needed between sites
- wide bandwidth
- multichannel transmissions
43Microwave Transmission Disadvantages
- line of sight requirement
- expensive towers and repeaters
- subject to interference such as passing airplanes
and rain
44Satellite Microwave Transmission
- a microwave relay station in space
- can relay signals over long distances
- geostationary satellites
- remain above the equator at a height of 22,300
miles (geosynchronous orbit) - travel around the earth in exactly the time the
earth takes to rotate
45Satellite Transmission Links
- earth stations communicate by sending signals to
the satellite on an uplink - the satellite then repeats those signals on a
downlink - the broadcast nature of the downlink makes it
attractive for services such as the distribution
of television programming
46Satellite Transmission Process
satellite transponder
dish
dish
22,300 miles
uplink station
downlink station
47Satellite Transmission Applications
- television distribution
- a network provides programming from a central
location - direct broadcast satellite (DBS)
- long-distance telephone transmission
- high-usage international trunks
- private business networks
48Principal Satellite Transmission Bands
- C band 4(downlink) - 6(uplink) GHz
- the first to be designated
- Ku band 12(downlink) -14(uplink) GHz
- rain interference is the major problem
- Ka band 19(downlink) - 29(uplink) GHz
- equipment needed to use the band is still very
expensive
49Satellite Advantages
- can reach a large geographical area
- high bandwidth
- cheaper over long distances
50Satellite Disadvantages
- high initial cost
- susceptible to noise and interference
- propagation delay
51Three Components of Data Communication
- Data
- Analog Continuous value data (sound, light,
temperature) - Digital Discrete value (text, integers, symbols)
- Signal
- Analog Continuously varying electromagnetic wave
- Digital Series of voltage pulses (square wave)
- Transmission
- Analog Works the same for analog or digital
signals - Digital Used only with digital signals
52Analog Data?Signal Options
- Analog data to analog signal
- Inexpensive, easy conversion (eg telephone)
- Data may be shifted to a different part of the
available spectrum (multiplexing) - Used in traditional analog telephony
- Analog data to digital signal
- Requires a codec (encoder/decoder)
- Allows use of digital telephony, voice mail
53Digital Data?Signal Options
- Digital data to analog signal
- Requires modem (modulator/demodulator)
- Allows use of PSTN to send data
- Necessary when analog transmission is used
- Digital data to digital signal
- Requires CSU/DSU (channel service unit/data
service unit) - Less expensive when large amounts of data are
involved - More reliable because no conversion is involved
54Transmission Choices
- Analog transmission
- only transmits analog signals, without regard for
data content - attenuation overcome with amplifiers
- signal is not evaluated or regenerated
- Digital transmission
- transmits analog or digital signals
- uses repeaters rather than amplifiers
- switching equipment evaluates and regenerates
signal
55Data, Signal, and Transmission Matrix
56Advantages of Digital Transmission
- The signal is exact
- Signals can be checked for errors
- Noise/interference are easily filtered out
- A variety of services can be offered over one
line - Higher utilization of bandwidth is possible with
data compression
57Why Use Analog Transmission?
- Already in place
- Significantly less expensive
- Lower attentuation rates
- Fully sufficient for transmission of voice signals
58Analog Encoding of Digital Data
- Data encoding and decoding technique to represent
data using the properties of analog waves - Modulation the conversion of digital signals to
analog form - Demodulation the conversion of analog data
signals back to digital form
59Modem
- An acronym for modulator-demodulator
- Uses a constant-frequency signal known as a
carrier signal - Converts a series of binary voltage pulses into
an analog signal by modulating the carrier signal - The receiving modem translates the analog signal
back into digital data
60Methods of Modulation
- Amplitude modulation (AM) or amplitude shift
keying (ASK) - Frequency modulation (FM) or frequency shift
keying (FSK) - Phase modulation or phase shift keying (PSK)
61Amplitude Shift Keying (ASK)
- In radio transmission, known as amplitude
modulation (AM) - The amplitude (or height) of the sine wave varies
to transmit the ones and zeros - Major disadvantage is that telephone lines are
very susceptible to variations in transmission
quality that can affect amplitude
62ASK Illustration
1
0
0
1
63Frequency Shift Keying (FSK)
- In radio transmission, known as frequency
modulation (FM) - Frequency of the carrier wave varies in
accordance with the signal to be sent - Signal transmitted at constant amplitude
- More resistant to noise than ASK
- Less attractive because it requires more analog
bandwidth than ASK
64FSK Illustration
1
1
0
1
65Phase Shift Keying (PSK)
- Also known as phase modulation (PM)
- Frequency and amplitude of the carrier signal are
kept constant - The carrier signal is shifted in phase according
to the input data stream - Each phase can have a constant value, or value
can be based on whether or not phase changes
(differential keying)
66PSK Illustration
0
0
1
1
67Differential Phase Shift Keying (DPSK)
0
0
1
1
68Analog Channel Capacity BPS vs. Baud
- Baud of signal changes per second
- BPSbits per second
- In early modems only, baudBPS
- Each signal change can represent more than one
bit, through complex modulation of amplitude,
frequency, and/or phase - Increases information-carrying capacity of a
channel without increasing bandwidth - Increased combinations also leads to increased
likelihood of errors
69Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM)
- Commonly used method for quadbit transfer
- Combination of 8 different angles in phase
modulation and two amplitudes of signal - Provides 16 different signals, each of which can
represent 4 bits
70Quadrature Amplitude Modulation Illustration
90
135
45
amplitude 1
0
180
amplitude 2
225
315
270
71QAM Example CCITT V.22bis Modem
- Uses QAM
- "bis" qualifier is a French term for "duo" or
"twice" - Supports transmission of full-duplex 2400 bps
synchronous or asynchronous data over a switched,
2-Wire, voice circuit - Modulation rate is 600 baud, with each baud
representing four data bits
72Trellis Coded Modulation (TCM)
- Sophisticated mathematics are used to predict the
best fit between the incoming signal and a large
set of possible combinations of amplitude and
phase changes - Forward Error Correcting (FEC)
- Used in V.32 (9600 bps) and higher speed modems
73CCITT V-Series Modem Recommendations
- V.22 1200 bps duplex modem standardized for use
in the PSTN and on leased circuits - V.29 9600 bps modem standardized for use on
point-to-point 4-wire leased telephone circuits - V. 32 2-wire, duplex modems operating at data
rate of up to 9600 bps for use on the PSTN and on
leased circuits
74V.32 bis Modems
- Uses Trellis coding with QAM
- Allows transport of data up to 14400 bps
- Modulation rate is 2400 baud
75V.34 Modems
- Capable transmission up to 28.8 kbps
- Modulation rate (baud rate) and carrier frequency
can vary - Multi-dimensional Trellis-coding is employed
76V.34 Modems
- Data rate up to 33.6 kbps over dial-up circuits
- Can achieve the above data rate only over
extremely clean lines (see class handout from
dbTechnology site) - Use a range of adaptive techniques that enable a
modem to learn and adjust to line conditions.
7756kbps Modems
- Asymmetrical can download at 56kbps but upload
at 33.6kbps only - Requires digital T-1 or ISDN PRI connection at
central site or ISP, single hop between sender
and receiver - Two incompatible systems, no official standard
- U.S. Robotics (56K x2)
- Rockwell (56K flex)
78Digital Encoding of Analog Data
- Primarily used in retransmission devices
- The sampling theorem If a signal is sampled at
regular intervals of time and at a rate higher
than twice the significant signal frequency, the
samples contain all the information of the
original signal. - 8000 samples/sec sufficient for 4000hz
79Converting Samples to Bits
- Quantizing
- Similar concept to pixelization
- Breaks wave into pieces, assigns a value in a
particular range - 8-bit range allows for 256 possible sample levels
- More bits means greater detail, fewer bits means
less detail
80Codec
- Coder/Decoder
- Converts analog signals into a digital form and
converts it back to analog signals - Where do we find codecs?
- Sound cards
- Scanners
- Voice mail
- Video capture/conferencing
81Digital Encodingof Digital Data
- Most common, easiest method is different voltage
levels for the two binary digits - Typically, negative1 and positive0
- Known as NRZ-L, or nonreturn-to-zero level,
because signal never returns to zero, and the
voltage during a bit transmission is level
82Differential NRZ
- Differential version is NRZI (NRZ, invert on
ones) - Change1, no change0
- Advantage of differential encoding is that it is
more reliable to detect a change in polarity than
it is to accurately detect a specific level
83Problems With NRZ
- Difficult to determine where one bit ends and the
next begins - In NRZ-L, long strings of ones and zeroes would
appear as constant voltage pulses - Timing is critical, because any drift results in
lack of synchronization and incorrect bit values
being transmitted
84Biphase Alternatives to NRZ
- Require at least one transition per bit time, and
may even have two - Modulation rate is greater, so bandwidth
requirements are higher - Advantages
- Synchronization due to predictable transitions
- Error detection based on absence of a transition
85Manchester Code
- Transition in the middle of each bit period
- Transition provides clocking and data
- Low-to-high1 , high-to-low0
- Used in Ethernet
86Differential Manchester
- Midbit transition is only for clocking
- Transition at beginning of bit period0
- Transition absent at beginning1
- Has added advantage of differential encoding
- Used in token-ring
87Digital Encoding Illustration
88Telecommunications Standards
- Where do they come from?
- Standard setting bodies
- Governments
- Two types
- Market-driven and voluntary
- Government-regulated and mandatory
89Advantages
- Assures a large market, which encourages mass
production and often lowers costs - Encourages vendors to enter market because
investment is protected - Allows products from multiple vendors to
communicate, providing consumers with wider
selection
90Disadvantages
- Standards process can freeze technology too
early, due to the length of the standards-setting
process and the speed with which technology
changes - Current process allows for multiple standards for
the same thing
91Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
(IEEE)
- The largest professional society in the world
- Develops standards in the area of electrical
engineering and computing - Publishes scores of journals and runs numerous
conferences each year - e.g. IEEE 802.x network standards
92American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
- Non-governmental and nonprofit organization
- Members are U.S. manufacturers and other interest
groups - Sets a variety of a standards, not just
computer-related - ANSI proposals are usually approved by ISO as
international standards - e.g. 802.x, created by IEEE, approved by ANSI,
passed on and approved by ISO
93National Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST)
- Formerly known as the National Bureau of
Standards (NBS) - Agency of the U.S. Dept.. of Commerce
- Issues standards that are mandatory for purchases
made by the U.S. Government except the Department
of Defense
94Industry Associations
- Electronic Industries Association (EIA)
- Telecommunication Industry Association (TIA)
- e.g. EIA-232 (formerly RS-232-C)
95Intl Telecommunications Union (ITU)
- Formerly known as Consultative Committee on
International Telegraph and Telephone (CCITT) - Standardize techniques and operations in the
telecommunications field - e.g.
- CCITT Group 3 Fax
- CCITT V.x modem standards
96ISO (International Standards Organization)
- Founded in 1946
- Issues standards on a vast number of subjects,
ranging from nuts and bolts to telephone pole
coatings - Has almost 200 Technical Committees
- A member of ITU-T
97Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
- Part of the Internet Architecture Board (IAB)
- IETF proposes and published Internet RFCs
- IAB determines which RFCs become standards, based
on IETF recommendations
98RFC? Internet Standard
- Stable and well-understood
- Technically competent
- Numerous independent and interoperable
implementations in operation - Significant public support
- Recognizably useful
- Differs from other standards processes because of
the emphasis on operational experience