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Signal Encoding Exercise

The document discusses different line coding techniques. It provides examples of signaling rate and data rate calculations for NRZ-L, NRZ-I, Manchester, and Differential Manchester encoding. It also shows signal patterns to illustrate the encoding and compares characteristics of Manchester and NRZI. Data rate examples are calculated based on samples taken at different time intervals and bits per sample.

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Ammar
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
96 views

Signal Encoding Exercise

The document discusses different line coding techniques. It provides examples of signaling rate and data rate calculations for NRZ-L, NRZ-I, Manchester, and Differential Manchester encoding. It also shows signal patterns to illustrate the encoding and compares characteristics of Manchester and NRZI. Data rate examples are calculated based on samples taken at different time intervals and bits per sample.

Uploaded by

Ammar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Name: Ammar Jemal Section A

0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0

NRZ-L

NRZ-I

Bipolar AMI

Manchester

Differential
Manchester

a. Signaling rate= 1 bit / 1ms


= 1000 SE/sec
Data rate = 8 bits/ 8ms
= 1000 b/s
a. Signaling rate= 1 bit / 500ms
= 2000 SE/sec
Data rate = 8 bits/ 8 x (500us)
= 8 bits/4ms
=2000 b/s

2.

0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0

Manchester

3.
 Manchester and NRZI encodings have transitions in the middle of the
clock cycle, with the type depending on the encoding.
 The challenge with Manchester is the frequency of the data transmission
is twice that as NRZI.
 Manchester encoding has no dc component while NRZI has a dc
component.
4. 1 sample every 4ms
3 bits per sample
data rate = number of bits / time taken
CASE 1: data rate = 15 bits / (5 x 4 ms )
= 15 bits / 20ms = 750 b/s

CASE 2: number of bits = 30


data rate = 30 bits / (10 x 2ms)
= 30bits / 20ms
= 1500 b/s
CASE 3: number of bits = 40
data rate = 40 bits / (10 x 2ms)
= 40bits / 20ms
= 2000 b/s

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