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TDMA

TDMA uses burst transmissions where stations transmit short bursts of data in sequence. One station transmits reference bursts that the other stations use for synchronization. During each frame interval, one station transmits data while the others remain silent. This allows multiple stations to share the transmission medium without interference. TDMA is suited for digital signals which can be assembled into bursts for transmission and reassembled at the receiver. Figures illustrate the basic TDMA concept showing reference bursts and data bursts transmitted in sequence, as well as the burst transmission process within a channel.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
65 views3 pages

TDMA

TDMA uses burst transmissions where stations transmit short bursts of data in sequence. One station transmits reference bursts that the other stations use for synchronization. During each frame interval, one station transmits data while the others remain silent. This allows multiple stations to share the transmission medium without interference. TDMA is suited for digital signals which can be assembled into bursts for transmission and reassembled at the receiver. Figures illustrate the basic TDMA concept showing reference bursts and data bursts transmitted in sequence, as well as the burst transmission process within a channel.

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dasbhaskar2010
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© © All Rights Reserved
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TDMA /Reference Burst

Burst transmission means relatively high bandwidth transmission over a short period of time
and as a result very high signaling rate during the data transmission is possible for a very short
period of time.
And in multiple access techniques in satellite communication TDMA techniques works in this
principle.
With TDMA, only one carrier uses the transponder at any one time, and therefore,
intermodulation products, which result from the nonlinear amplification of multiple carriers,
are absent and this leads to one of the most significant advantages of TDMA.

Because the signal information is transmitted in bursts, TDMA is only suited to digital signals.
Digital data can be assembled into burst format for transmission and reassembled from the
received bursts through the use of digital buffer memories.

Below figure illustrates the basic TDMA concept, in which the stations transmit bursts in
sequence. Burst synchronization is required, and one station is assigned solely for the purpose
of transmitting reference bursts to which the others can be synchronized. The time interval
from the start of one reference burst to the next is termed a frame. A frame contains the
reference burst R and the bursts from the other earth stations, these being shown as A, B, and
C in Figure.

Figure illustrates the basic principles of burst transmission for a single channel. Overall, the
transmission appears continuous because the input and output bit rates are continuous and
equal. However, within the transmission channel, input bits are temporarily stored and
transmitted in bursts. Since the time interval between bursts is the frame time TF, the required
buffer capacity is

M = RbTF
Where Rb is the bit rate
Figure: Time-division multiple access (TDMA) using a reference
Station for burst synchronization.

The buffer memory fills up at the input bit rate Rb during the frame time interval. These M bits
are transmitted as a burst in the next frame without any break in continuity of the input. The M
bits are transmitted in the burst time TB, and the transmission rate, which is equal to the burst
bit rate, is
Figure: Burst-mode transmission linking two continuous-mode streams.

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