Modulation and Multiplexing: How To Send Data Fast and Far?
Modulation and Multiplexing: How To Send Data Fast and Far?
o c . s 2-Values & Multi-Values Encoding, and r Baud Rate & Bit Rate e Speed & Bandwidth Nyquist Theorem Relationship between e n Shannon Theorem Relationship between Speed & Noise i g Digital Encoding n E Carrier, Modulation, O Demodulation and Modem o - Digital Modulations: FSK, ASK, PSK, QAM D a Multiplexing and Demultiplexing a - FDMF (Frequency Division Multiplexing)
- WDM (Wave Division Multiplexing) - CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access) - TDM (Time Division Multiplexing)
Lecture 2
2T 3T 4T 5T 6T
Encoder
Pulse (2-values) half T
0 1 00 1 0
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Minimum T?
0 1 0 010 1110
2T 3T 4T 5T 6T
Maximum M?
Nyquist Theorem
2T 3T 4T 5T 6T
Encoder
Nyquist Theorem (1920):
1) Given a system/channel bandwidth B, the minimum T=1/2B, i.e., the maximum signal rate D=2B pulses/sec (baud rate, Baud) = 2Blog2M bits/sec (bit rate, bps) 2) To transmit data in bit rate D, the minimum bandwidth of a system/channel must be B>=D/2log2M (Hz)
Explanations:
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1) 2)
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Decoder
Questions:
Assume a telephone channel bandwidth B=3000Hz and M=1024, whats its maximum rate? Can we use the above channel to send a TV signal in real time? Why?
Shannon Theorem
Encoder
1) Given a system/channel bandwidth B and signal-to-noise ratio S/N, the maximum value of
M = (1+S/N) when baud rate equals B, and its channel capacity is,
C = Blog2(1+S/N) bits/sec (bps, bite rate) 2) To transmit data in bit rate D, the channel capacity of a system/channel must be C>=D
Two theorems give upper bounds of bit rates implement-able without giving implemental method.
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Decoder
Channel Capacity
Lecture 2
Channel Capacity
Shannon theorem C = Blog2(1+S/N) shows that the maximum rate or channel capacity of a system/channel depends on bandwidth, signal energy and noise intensity. Thus, to increase the capacity, three possible ways are 1) increase bandwidth; 2) raise signal energy;
Examples 1. For an extremely noise channel S/N 0, C 0, cannot send any data regardless of bandwidth 2. 3. If S/N=1 (signal and noise in a same level), C=B The theoretical highest bit rate of a regular telephone line where B=3000Hz and S/N=35dB. 10log10(S/N)=35 log2(S/N)= 3.5x log210 C= Blog2(1+S/N) =~ Blog2(S/N) =3000x3.5x log210=34.86 Kbps If B is fixed, we have to increase signal-to-noise ration for increasing transmission rate.
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3) reduce noise
Shannon theorem tell us that we cannot send data faster than the channel capacity, but we can send data through a channel at the rate near its capacity. However, it has not told us any method to attain such transmission rate of the capacity.
Lecture 2
Digital Encoding
010010110
Digital Encoder
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Encoding Schemes: - RZ (Return to Zero) - NRZ (Non-Return to Zero) # NRZ-I, NRZ-L (RS-232, RS-422) # AMI (ISDN) - Biphase # Manchester and Differential Manchester (LAN) # B8ZS, HDB3
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Digital System Channel
Lecture 2
s(t)
a a F Modulator
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Acos(2fct+)
Lecture 2
Digital Modulation
Digital Modulation input: digital signal output: analogy signal FSK Frequency Shift Keying Digital signal
PSK Phase Shift Keying 4-PSK 00: Acos(2fct+ 0 ) 01: Acos(2fct+ / ) 10: Acos(2fct+ ) 11: Acos(2fct+ 3/2)
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2ASK
4PSK
0 0
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1 1
Lecture 2
m(t) = A[s(t)] cos{2fct+[s(t)]} = p(t) cos(2fct) + q(t) sin(2fct) /4 (90) phase difference between cos() and sin(), called quadrature QAM is currently more common in digital communications 4-QAM, 8-QAM, 16-QAM, 32-QAM, 64-QAM, 128-QAM, 256-QAM,
8-QAM
sin
011 010
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100 000 001 110 111
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0101 1101
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16-QAM
1100
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. . . .
0011 0010
. . . .
sin
0001
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. . . .
1110
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. . . .
1001
cos
1000
Lecture 2
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Lecture 2
CompA1 CompB1
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CompC1 Dc
D E M U X
Multiplexer
Demultiplexer
Lecture 2
A1 B1
C1
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Mod Mod
Mod
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Lecture 2
Spread Spectrum: - spread the signal over a wider bandwidth for reliability and security - its carrier frequency is not fixed and dynamically changed - such changes is controlled by a pseudorandom 0/1 sequence (code) - the signal is represented in code-domain
s(t)
a Mod Code a F
..0011001001010
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Digital Mod
Acos2fct
Pseudorandom code
CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access): different codes for different signals
....
P f
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4.4-5 MHz
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Variable rate users 10 ms frame
8C32810.138ppt-Cimini-7/98
Lecture 2
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Exercise 2
1. Use Nyquist's Theorem to determine the maximum rate in bits per second at which data can be send across a transmission system that has a bandwidth of 4000 Hz and use four values of voltage to encode information. What's the maximum rate when encoding the information with 16 values of voltage? 2. Is it possible to increase a number of the encoded values without limit in order to increase transmission speed of system? Why? Assume a bandwidth of a system is 4000 Hz and a signal-to-noise ratio S/N=1023, What's the maximum rate of the system? 3. (True/false) A digital modulator using ASK, PSK or QAM is a digital-to-digital system. 4. (1) If the bit rate of 4-PSK signal is 2400bps, whats its baud rate? (2) If the baud rate of 256-QAM is 2400 baud, whats its bit rate?
5. The bite rate of one digital telephone channel is 64Kbps. If a single mode optical fiber can transmit at 2 Gbps, how many telephone channel can be multiplexed to the fiber. Assume TDM is used.
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