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Communication System-1 (Introduction To Communication System)

This lecture delivered by my Lecturer will give you introduction to Communication System, Noise in Communication & basic introduction to Modulation Techniques.

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Shayan Asad
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
285 views

Communication System-1 (Introduction To Communication System)

This lecture delivered by my Lecturer will give you introduction to Communication System, Noise in Communication & basic introduction to Modulation Techniques.

Uploaded by

Shayan Asad
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 21

EE-324 Communication Systems

Lecture 1: Introduction to
Communication Systems

12:40 PM 1
Course Textbook(s)
1. B. P. Lathi,
"Modern Digital and Analog Communication
Systems", 4th Edition, Oxford University
Press, 2009.

2. Simon Haykin,
"Communication Systems", Latest Edition,
John Wiley & Sons.
12:40 PM 2
Introduction to Communication
Systems
• Study of communication systems can be divided into
two areas:
– How communication systems work.
– How to deal with noise (unwanted signal).
• First area needs familiarity with Signal Analysis (Signal
and Systems),
• Second area needs knowledge of Probability theory
and random processes
• This course concerns with communication of electrical
signals. In the past, it was done manually by runners,
carrier pigeons, drum beats, and torches.
12:40 PM 3
History: Communication Systems
• Thousands of years before the Common Era
(B.C.E.) drums were used for messaging.
• Trojan -- signals of torches
• Alexander the Great, Hannibal and Caesar
used running carriers for transmission of their
commends.
• Roman used smoke signals for messaging.
• Genghis Khan used carrier pigeons to spread
the reports of his victories.
12:40 PM 4
History: Communication Systems
• 16th century, Sir William Penn developed a comm.
Code by using flag or light.
• 1835, Samuel Morse developed communication code
( points and dashes)
• 1876, Alexander Graham Bell invented telephone
• 1861, Maxwell proposed mathematical theory of
Electro-magnetic (EM) waves

12:40 PM 5
History: Communication Systems
• 1887, Hertz demonstrated the existence of EM
waves
• 1895-1898, Marconi built radio telegraphy
• 1921, First analog land mobile by police
department in Detroit and London.
• 1933, FM was invented, which made possible
high quality and long range radio communication.
• 1964, Improved mobile telephone service (IMTS)
was developed by AT&T.

12:40 PM 6
History: Communication Systems
• Second Generation (2G): 1990’s Cellular has enjoyed
exponential with over 200 million users worldwide today ..
– 1990 Global System Mobile (GSM) is introduced in 800-900 MHz
band.
• 2.5 Generation- :1998 mobile wireless data: wireless data
service + internet “micro-browser” is introduced.
• 3rd Generation- 2000: IMT-2000 (International Mobile
Telecom.) proposals for a world-wide 3rd generation
standard was submitted (384KBPS to 2MBPS).
• 4th generation – may be to use W-CDMA-2000 or OFDM
(orthogonal frequency division multiplexer), TV, Satellite,
LAN, and 100 Mbps bandwidth

12:40 PM 7
Introduction
• The purpose of Communication System is to transport
an information signal from a source to a user
destination via a communication channel (transmission
system).
• Communication system can be analog or digital
• Analog communication:
– information signal is continuously varying in both
amplitude and time.
• Digital communication:
– information signal is processed so that it can be
represented by a sequence of discrete message (e.g., 0 or
1).

12:40 PM 8
Communication Model
Transmitter
Information Source Channel
Source Transducer Encoder

Noise, Interference Comm.


and distortion Channel

Destination User Channel


(User) Transducer Decoder
Receiver
12:40 PM 9
Communication Model
• Information source:
– generates the data to be transmitted.
– Human, telephones, and computers
• Transmitter:
– transforms and encodes the information in such a way
to produce electromagnetic signals, that can be
transmitted over a communication Channel
– For example, MODEM takes in digital bit streams from
computer and converts into analog signal that can be
transmitted by the telephone networks

12:40 PM 10
Communication Model
• Communication Channel:
– a transmission line or complex network connecting
source and destination
– (e.g., wire, Coaxial cable
optical fiber, or radio link)
• Receiver
– accepts the signal from the channel and converts it
into a form that can be handled by the destination
user or device
• Destination
– takes the incoming data from the receiver.

12:40 PM 11
Examples of Communication Systems

12:40 PM 12
Noise in Communication System
• Noise is unwanted signal and can be classified
into:
– External noise
• interference, human-made noise, fluorescent lights, or
natural noise (electrical storms, solar, and radiation).
– Internal noise
• thermal motion of electrons in conductors, random
emission, diffusion or recombination of charged
carriers in electronics devices.

12:40 PM 13
Signal and Noise

12:40 PM 14
Analog and Digital Messages
• Analog
– characterized by data whose values varies over a continuous range.
– Human speech, temperature, atmospheric pressure etc.
• Digital
– constructed with a finite number of symbols.
– For example, printed English language consists of 26 letters, 10
numbers, space, comma etc. Thus, a text is a digital message
constructed from symbols.

Analog

Digital
12:40 PM 15
Analog to Digital Conversion

12:40 PM 16
Analog to Digital Conversion

12:40 PM 17
Modulation
• Baseband signals are not suitable for direct transmission
• Such signals are modified to facilitate transmission.
• This modification process is known as Modulation.
– where baseband signal modifies some parameter of a high-frequency carrier
signal.
– A carrier is a sinusoid of high frequency, and one of its parameters-such as
amplitude, frequency, or phase-is varied in proportion to the baseband signal
m(t).
• Modulation can be
– Amplitude modulation (AM)
• In AM, the carrier amplitude varies in proportion to m(t)
– Frequency modulation (FM)
• In FM, the carrier frequency varies in proportion m(t)
– Phase modulation (PM).
• In PM, the carrier phase varies in proportion m(t)
• At the receiver, the modulated signal is passed through a reverse process
called Demodulation to reconstruct the baseband signal.

12:40 PM 18
AM and FM

Amplitude modulation (AM)


the carrier amplitude varies in
proportion to m(t)

Frequency modulation (FM)


the carrier frequency varies in
12:40 PM
proportion m(t) 19
AM, FM, and PM

12:40 PM 20
Reading
• Only presentation slides of Lecture 1

12:40 PM 21

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