Fundamentals of Networking - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 47
About This Presentation
Title:

Fundamentals of Networking

Description:

One hour of music requires 633Mb. Calculate for a DVD. Sampling rate: 192,000/sec ... This increases the travel time of the signal, thereby causing errors. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:39
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 48
Provided by: madh
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Fundamentals of Networking


1
Fundamentals of Networking
2
Data Communications
  • exchange of digital information between two
    devices using an electronic transmission medium

3
Types of Signals
  • Analog signals
  • used for voice communication
  • has a continuous waveform
  • Digital signals
  • discrete
  • not continuous
  • 0s and 1s

4
Digital vs. Analog
Amplitude
Analog Transmission
Time
1
1
1
1
() voltage
Amplitude
0
0
0
0
0
(-) voltage
Time
Digital Transmission
5
Advantages of Digital Signals
  • Can be converted to decimal number
  • Used for error detection and encryption
  • Language of computers
  • Easier to recover after distortion
  • Signals weaken due to resistance in a medium
  • Waveform shape gets distorted

6
Signal Regeneration
1
1
1
1
() voltage
Amplitude
0
0
0
0
0
(-) voltage
Time
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
() voltage
Amplitude
0
0
0
0
0
(-) voltage
Time
7
Converting Analog to Digital
  • Pulse Code Modulation (PCM)
  • Like getting a ticker quote every 10 minutes
  • Approximates the actual signal curve
  • In PCM
  • Measure the signal height every 1/8000th of a
    second
  • 8 bits used to report the height at each
    measurement
  • 8800064,000 bits per second to provide
    approximation of analog signal
  • 64Kbps represents a single voice line in digital
    telecommunications

8
Pulse Code Modulation
1111 1111
Value transmitted
128 values This side
Sampling Interval 1/8000 second
128 values This side
0000 0000
Value transmitted
9
How about a CD?
  • Lasers etches lands and pits on the surface of a
    CD
  • Uses 16 bits to measure height of signal
    (quantization)
  • Samples 44,100 times per second for each of two
    channels (sampling rate)
  • 16441002 176,000 bps
  • One hour of music requires 633Mb

10
Calculate for a DVD
  • Sampling rate 192,000/sec
  • Quantization 24 bits
  • Number of channels 2
  • How much space (in Gb) is required for a 2 hour
    movie?

11
Digital to Analog Conversion
  • Needed to transmit computer signals over
    telephone lines
  • Analog signal characteristics
  • Amplitude
  • Intensity of the wave (height)
  • Wavelength
  • Distance between comparable points on the wave
  • Frequency
  • Number of up and down cycles per second (Hz)
  • Phase
  • Relative state of the amplitude

12
Wave Characteristics
Amplitude
Wavelength
13
Amplitude Modulation
14
Frequency Modulation
15
Telecommunications System
Minicomputer
terminals
Main frame
Front-End Processor
modems
multiplexer
Remote location
16
Multiplexing
  • Allows multiple signals to be sent over same
    medium at same time
  • Modes of multiplexing
  • Frequency Division (FDM)
  • Time Division (TDM)

17
Frequency Division Multiplexing
X X X X
X X X X X X
Y Y Y Y Y Y
Y Y Y Y
Z Z Z Z Z Z
Z Z Z Z
  • originally designed so multiple voice
  • streams could be placed on same telephone line
  • Multiple analog signals superimposed but on
  • different frequency spectra
  • Involves pair of multiplexers

18
Time Division Multiplexing
X X X X
Y Y Y Y
X
Y
Z
X
Y
Z
X
Y
Z
Z Z Z Z
  • Each signal allotted a time slot
  • Creates a composite stream with slots dedicated
    to data sources
  • If data source is not sending, slot goes unused
    wasteful
  • Instead, use statistical TDM in which slots are
    dynamically allocated
  • If there is big demand, buffers are used.

19
Transmission Media
  • the physical path along which the data is carried
  • Types
  • twisted pair
  • coaxial
  • fiber optics and free space
  • satellite
  • terrestrial

20
Transmission Media
  • Twisted Pair
  • pair of wires twisted along entire length
  • usually copper with an insulating coat
  • Unshielded Twisted Pair (UTP) popular with LANs
  • CAT3 (voice) and CAT5 are common
  • CAT5 used for both voice and data
  • 100Mbs transmission speed
  • Limited segment length signals needs
    regeneration every 100 meters

21
Transmission Media
  • Coaxial cable
  • thick insulated copper wire
  • Longer segment lengths
  • can carry up to 200 Mb/second
  • less interference due to shielding
  • Uses FDM to transmit 1000s of voice channels and
    100s of TV channels
  • Not popular in LANS
  • More difficult to work with than UTP

22
Transmission Media
  • Fiber Optics cable
  • thousands of little fiber optic strands
  • May be glass or plastic
  • Thickness of a human hair
  • Inner core surrounded by glass (cladding)
  • Can be single mode or multimode
  • Single mode
  • Expensive, bigger capacity, long segment length
  • 8/125
  • Multimode
  • Cheaper, less capacity
  • 62.5/125
  • Data transmitted as pulses of light
  • 500 Kb/sec to several GB/sec

23
A typical optic fiber
  • Core made of silica and germania
  • Optic cladding is pure silica
  • Mix of different refractive indices allows for
  • total internal reflection

24
Point-to-point fiber optic system
25
Advantages of fiber optics
  • Nearly infinite capacity
  • Single fiber can carry 40000 telephone calls or
    250 channels of television
  • High transmission rates at greater distances
  • Immune to interference and electricity
  • Does not corrode (being glass)
  • Smaller and lighter than coaxial or twisted pair
  • Extremely secure

26
Wireless Transmission
  • Directional
  • Focuses electromagnetic beam in direction of
    receiver
  • Terrestrial microwave
  • Satellite microwave
  • Omni directional
  • Spreads the electromagnetic signal in all
    directions
  • AM and FM radio
  • 3G networks
  • Smart watches

27
Terrestrial Microwave
  • Parabolic dish antenna sends signal to receiving
    dish
  • Line-of-sight
  • Typically on towers to avoid obstacles
  • Frequencies in the gigahertz range

28
What is a telecommunications satellite?
29
Telecommunications satellites
  • Space-based cluster of radio repeaters (called
    transponders)
  • Link
  • terrestrial radio transmitters to satellite
    receiver (uplink)
  • Satellite transmitters to terrestrial receivers
    (downlink)

30
Orbits
  • Mostly geostationary (GEO)
  • Circular orbit
  • 22,235 miles above earth
  • Fixed point above surface
  • Almost always a point on Equator
  • Must be separated by at least 4 degrees

31
Satellite services
  • Wide Area Broadcasting
  • Single transmitter to multiple receivers
  • Wide Area Report-Back
  • Multiple transmitters to a single receiver
  • Example VSATs (very small aperture terminals)
  • Also have microwave transmitters and receivers
  • Allows for spot-beam transmission (point-
    to-point data communications)
  • Can switch between beams upon request (Demand
    Assigned Multiple Access DAMA)
  • Multi-beam satellites link widely dispersed
    mobile and fixed point users

32
Earth-based equipment
  • Original microwave transmitters and receivers
    were large installations
  • Dishes measuring 100 feet in diameter
  • Modern antennas about 3 feet in diameter

33
A Modern GEO satellite (IntelSat 900 series)
  • May have more than 72 separate microwave
    transponders
  • Each transponder handles multiple simultaneous
    users (protocol called Time Division Multiple
    Access)
  • Transponder consists of
  • Receiver tuned to frequency of uplink
  • Frequency shifter (to lower frequency to that of
    transmitter)
  • Power amplifier

34
IntelSat 902 (launched August 30, 2001)
35
Frequency ranges
  • Most transponders operate in 36MHz bandwidth
  • Use this bandwidth for
  • voice telephony (400 2-way channels/transponder)
  • Data communication (120Mbs)
  • TV and FM Radio

36
C-band, Ku-band, Ka-band
  • Most GEO satellites operate in the C-Band
    frequencies
  • Uplink at 6 GHz
  • Downlink at 4 GHz
  • Ku-band also used
  • Uplink at 14 GHz
  • Downlink at 11 GHz
  • Above bands best suited for minimal atmospheric
    attenuation
  • Few slots left forcing companies to look at Ka
    band (uplink30 GHZ , downlink 20 GHz)

37
MEO Satellites
  • Exist between the first and second Van Allen
    Radiation belts
  • Peak height is 9000 miles\
  • Typical is about 4000 miles
  • Need less power than GEO satellites to reach.
  • Example GPS satellites

38
Global Positioning Systems
  • A constellation of 24 DoD satellites orbiting
    about 10,000 miles above earths surface
  • First launched in 1978 complete set by 1994
    replaced every ten years or so..
  • Solar-powered Each circles earth about twice a
    day
  • Also have 5 ground stations (control segments)
  • monitor the GPS satellites, checking both their
    operational health and their exact position in
    space.
  • Five monitor stations Hawaii, Ascension Island,
    Diego Garcia, Kwajalein, and Colorado Springs.

39
GPS Constellation
40
How they work
  • To determine position
  • GPS satellites emit 3 bits of information in its
    signal (L1 for civilians L2 for military)
  • Pseudorandom code (ID which identifies specific
    satellite)
  • Ephemeris data (status of satellite and current
    data and time)
  • Almanac data (tells exactly where that satellite
    and all others are supposed to be at any given
    time during the day)
  • Finding your location
  • Compare time a signal is transmitted to when it
    is received tells how far away satellite is
    receiver knows it is on the surface of an
    imaginary sphere centered around the GPS
    satellite
  • With similar distance measurements from other
    satellites, receiver can determine location
    (intersection of at least three spheres)
  • GPS receiver must lock on to 3 satellites to give
    2D location 4 satellites to give altitude as
    well.
  • Accurate up to 10-15 meters DGPS and Augmented
    GPS can go down to a few centimeters.

41
Sources of Error for GPS
  • Ionosphere and troposphere delays The satellite
    signal slows as it passes through the atmosphere.
  • Signal multipath This occurs when the GPS
    signal is reflected off objects such as tall
    buildings or large rock surfaces before it
    reaches the receiver. This increases the travel
    time of the signal, thereby causing errors.
  • Receiver clock errors A receiver's built-in
    clock is not as accurate as the atomic clocks
    onboard the GPS satellites. Therefore, it may
    have very slight timing errors.
  • Orbital errors Also known as ephemeris errors,
    these are inaccuracies of the satellite's
    reported location.
  • Number of satellites visible The more
    satellites a GPS receiver can "see," the better
    the accuracy. Buildings, terrain, electronic
    interference, or sometimes even dense foliage can
    block signal reception, causing position errors
    or possibly no position reading at all. GPS units
    typically will not work indoors, underwater or
    underground.
  • Satellite geometry/shading This refers to the
    relative position of the satellites at any given
    time. Ideal satellite geometry exits when the
    satellites are located at wide angles relative to
    each other. Poor geometry results when the
    satellites are located in a line or in a tight
    grouping.
  • Intentional degradation of the satellite signal
    Selective Availability (SA) is an intentional
    degradation of the signal once imposed by the
    U.S. Department of Defence. The government turned
    off SA in May 2000, which significantly improved
    the accuracy of civilian GPS receivers.

Source http//www.pocketgps.co.uk/howgpsworks.php
42
LEO Satellites
  • Lowest of the satellites below the first
    radiation belt
  • Typically orbit at 600 miles
  • Much less power needed than for GEO and MEO
  • Can be accessed using smaller devices such as
    phones.
  • Available anywhere in the world.
  • Geostationary?

43
Companies on the forefront Teledesic
  • Offer Internet-in-the-Sky?
  • Main shareholders Craig McCaw and Bill Gates
  • McCaw also has taken over ICO Global
    Communications
  • Wanted Iridium but has backed out

44
Teledesic
  • Again, series of LEO satellites
  • 24 pole orbiting satellite rings, 15 degrees
    apart
  • 12 satellites in each ring (total 288 LEO
    satellites)
  • Worldwide switching.. Satellites pass on data
    through laser
  • Will map IP packets on latitudes and longitudes
    .. Average will be 5 satellite hops in 75 ms
  • Supposed to start in 2002 offer 2Mbps Internet
    access from terminals starting at 1000 each
  • Postponed to 2005

45
Optical Transmission
  • Cutting edge
  • Uses modulated monochromatic light to carry data
    from transmitter to receiver
  • Optical wavelengths are suited for high rate
    broadband communications
  • Laser-based (up to 1000 times faster than coaxial)

46
Research Question for Next Class
  • What is Abilene?

47
Next Class
  • More about networks
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com