Communication Questionare
Communication Questionare
Hard Handoff : hard handoff is the process in which the cell connection is disconnected from the previous cell before
it is made with the new one.
Soft Handoff : It is the process in which a new connection is established first before disconnecting the old one. It is
thus more efficient and smart.
What is CDMA?
CDMA stands for Code Division Multiple Access which uses digital format. In CDMA systems several transmissions
via the radio interface take place simultaneously on the same frequency bandwidth. User data is combined at the
transmitter’s side with a code, then transmitted. On air, all transmission get mixed. At the receiver's side the same
code is used as in the transmitter’s side. The code helps the receiver to filter the user information of the transmitter
from incoming mixture of all transmissions on the same frequency band and same time.
Explain the concept of frequency re-use.
The whole of the geographical area is divided into hexagonal shape geometrical area called cell and each cell having
its own transceiver. Each BTS (cell site) allocated different band of frequency or different channel. Each BTS antenna
is designed in such a way that i cover cell area in which it is placed with frequency allotted without interfering other
cell signals. The design process of selecting and allocating channel groups for all of the cellular base station within
system is called frequency reuse.
Explain Bluetooth.
Bluetooth is designed to be a personal area network, where participating entities are mobile and require sporadic
communication with others. It is omni directional i.e. it does not have line of sight limitation like infra red does.
Ericsson started the work on Bluetooth and named it after the Danish king Harold Biuetooth. Bluetooth operates in
the 2.4 GHz area of spectrum and provides a range of 10 metres. It offers transfer speeds of around 720 Kbps.
1) Expand ECE.
Electronics & Communication Engineering.
2) What is Electronic?
The study and use of electrical devices that operate by controlling the flow of electrons or other
electrically charged particles.
3) What is communication?
Communication means transferring a signal from the transmitter which passes through a medium
then the output is obtained at the receiver. (or)communication says as transferring of message from
one place to another place called communication.
4) Different types of communications? Explain.
Analog and digital communication.
As a technology, analog is the process of taking an audio or video signal (the human voice) and
translating it into electronic pulses. Digital on the other hand is breaking the signal into a binary
format where the audio or video data is represented by a series of "1"s and "0"s.
Digital signals are immune to noise, quality of transmission and reception is good, components used
in digital communication can be produced with high precision and power consumption is also very
less when compared with analog signals.
5) What is engineering?
The application of science to the needs of humanity and a profession in which a knowledge of the
mathematical and natural sciences gained by study, experience, and practice is applied with judgment
to develop ways to use economically the materials and forces of nature for the benefit of mankind.
6) Difference between electronic and electrical.
Electronics work on DC and with a voltage range of -48vDC to +48vDC. If the electronic device is
plugged into a standard wall outlet, there will be a transformer inside which will convert the AC
voltage you are supplying to the required DC voltage needed by the device. Examples: Computer,
radio, T.V, etc...
Electric devices use line voltage (120vAC, 240vAC, etc...). Electric devices can also be designed to
operate on DC sources, but will be at DC voltages above 48v. Examples: are incandescent lights,
heaters, fridge, stove, etc...
7) What is sampling?
The process of obtaining a set of samples from a continuous function of time x(t) is referred to as
sampling.
8) State sampling theorem.
It states that, while taking the samples of a continuous signal, it has to be taken care that the sampling
rate is equal to or greater than twice the cut off frequency and the minimum sampling rate is known
as the Nyquist rate.
9) What is cut-off frequency?
The frequency at which the response is -3dB with respect to the maximum response.
10) What is pass band?
Passband is the range of frequencies or wavelengths that can pass through a filter without being
attenuated.
3. The Picocell only has a range of a few hundred metres and may be used to boost weak signals
within large buildings.
Each base station can only cope with a certain number of calls at any one time. So if demand exceeds
the capacity of a base station an additional base station is needed.
20) What is a base station?
Base station is a radio receiver/transmitter that serves as the hub of the local wireless network, and
may also be the gateway between a wired network and the wireless network.
21) How many satellites are required to cover the earth?
3 satellites are required to cover the entire earth, which is placed at 120 degree to each other. The life
span of the satellite is about 15 years.
22) What is a repeater?
A repeater is an electronic device that receives a signal and retransmits it at a higher level and/or
higher power, or onto the other side of an obstruction, so that the signal can cover longer distances
without degradation.
23) What is attenuation?
Attenuation is the reduction in amplitude and intensity of a signal. Signals may attenuate
exponentially by transmission through a medium, or by increments calculated in electronic circuitry
or set by variable controls. Attenuation is an important property in telecommunications and
ultrasound applications because of its importance in determining signal strength as a function of
distance. Attenuation is usually measured in units of decibels per unit length of medium (dB/cm,
dB/km, etc) and is represented by the attenuation coefficient of the medium in question.
24) What is multiplexing?
Multiplexing (known as muxing) is a term used to refer to a processwhere multiple analog message
signals or digital data streams are combined into one signal over a shared medium. The aim is to
share an expensive resource. For example, in telecommunications, several phone calls may be
transferred using one wire.
25) What is CDMA, TDMA, FDMA?
Code division multiple access (CDMA) is a channel access methodutilized by various radio
communication technologies. CDMA employsspread-spectrum technology and a special coding
scheme (where each transmitter is assigned a code) to allow multiple users to be multiplexed over the
same physical channel. By contrast, time division multiple access (TDMA) divides access by time,
whilefrequency-division multiple access (FDMA) divides it byfrequency.
An analogy to the problem of multiple access is a room (channel) in which people wish to
communicate with each other. To avoid confusion, people could take turns speaking (time division),
speak at different pitches (frequency division), or speak in different directions (spatial division). In
CDMA, they would speak different languages. People speaking the same language can understand
each other, but not other people. Similarly, in radio CDMA, each group of users is given a shared
code. Many codes occupy the same channel, but only users associated with a particular code can
understand each other.
26) Difference between CDMA and GSM.
These are the two different means of mobile communication being presently used worldwide. The
basic difference lies in the Multiplexing method used in the aerial communication i.e. from Mobile
Tower to your mobile and vice versa.
CDMA uses Code Division Multiple Access as the name itself indicates, for example you are in a
hall occupied with number of people speaking different language. You will find that the one
language you know will be heard by you and the others will be treated like noise. In the same manner
each CDMA mobile communication takes place with a "code" communicating between them and the
other end if one is knowing that code then only it can listen to the data being transmitted i.e. the
communication is in the coded form.
On the other hand GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications)uses narrowband TDMA,
which allows eight simultaneous calls on the same radio frequency. TDMA works by dividing a
radio frequency into time slots and then allocating slots to multiple calls. In this way, a single
frequency can support multiple, simultaneous data channels.
27) What is an Amplifier?
An electronic device or electrical circuit that is used to boost (amplify) the power, voltage or current
of an applied signal.
28) What is Barkhausen criteria?
Barkhausen criteria, without which you will not know which conditions, are to be satisfied for
oscillations.
“Oscillations will not be sustained if, at the oscillator frequency, the magnitude of the product of the
transfer gain of the amplifier and the magnitude of the feedback factor of the feedback network ( the
magnitude of the loop gain ) are less than unity”.
The condition of unity loop gain -Aβ = 1 is called the Barkhausencriterion. This condition implies
that | Aβ|= 1and that the phase of - Aβ is zero.
29) Explain Full duplex and half duplex.
Full duplex refers to the transmission of data in two directions simultaneously. For example, a
telephone is a full-duplex devicebecause both parties can talk at once. In contrast, a walkie-talkie is
ahalf-duplex device because only one party can transmit at a time.
Most modems have a switch that lets you choose between full-duplex and half-duplex modes. The
choice depends on whichcommunications program you are running.
In full-duplex mode, data you transmit does not appear on yourscreen until it has been received and
sent back by the other party. This enables you to validate that the data has been accurately
transmitted. If your display screen shows two of each character, it probably means that your modem
is set to half-duplex mode when it should be in full-duplex mode.
30) What is a feedback? And explain different types of feedback.
Feedback is a process whereby some proportion of the output signal of a system is passed (fed back)
to the input. This is often used to control the dynamic behaviour of the system.
Types of feedback:
Negative feedback: This tends to reduce output (but in amplifiers, stabilizes and linearizes
operation). Negative feedback feeds part of a system's output, inverted, into the system's input;
generally with the result that fluctuations are attenuated.
Positive feedback: This tends to increase output. Positive feedback, sometimes referred to as
"cumulative causation", is a feedback loop system in which the system responds
to perturbation (Aperturbation means a system, is an alteration of function, induced by external or
internal mechanisms) in the same direction as the perturbation. In contrast, a system that responds to
the perturbation in the opposite direction is called a negative feedback system.
Bipolar feedback: which can either increase or decrease output.
31) Advantages of negative feedback over positive feedback.
Much attention has been given by researchers to negative feedback processes, because negative
feedback processes lead systems towards equilibrium states. Positive feedback reinforces a given
tendency of a system and can lead a system away from equilibrium states, possibly causing quite
unexpected results.
32) Example for negative feedback and positive feedback.
Example for –ve feedback is ---Amplifiers
And for +ve feedback is – Oscillators
33) What is Oscillator?
An oscillator is a circuit that creates a waveform output from a direct current input. The two main
types of oscillator are harmonic and relaxation. The harmonic oscillators have smooth curved
waveforms, while relaxation oscillators have waveforms with sharp changes.
34) What is a transducer and transponder?
A transducer is a device, usually electrical, electronic, electro-mechanical, electromagnetic, photonic,
or photovoltaic that converts one type of energy or physical attribute to another for various purposes
including measurement or information transfer.
In telecommunication, the term transponder (short-forTransmitter-responder and sometimes
abbreviated to XPDR, XPNDR, TPDR or TP) has the following meanings:
An automatic device that receives, amplifies, andretransmits a signal on a
different frequency (see alsobroadcast translator).
An automatic device that transmits a predetermined messagein response to a predefined
received signal.
EBCDIC (Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code) is an 8-bit character encoding used on
IBM mainframe operating systems
51) What do you mean by 3 dB cutoff frequency? Why is it 3 dB, not 1 dB?
ans:3db implies 70%(o.7o7) of the power,i'e we r interested to consider the bandwidth range from
peak to 70% b'coz uptp 70% its reliable.hence 3db is called as half power freq. 3db value is the mean
square value which is 70% of the maximum value.
De-emphasis
" Improving the signal to noise ratio by decreasing the magnitude of higher frequency signals with
respect to lower frequency signals"
54) What is the basic difference between Latches and Flip flops?
ans:latch works without clock signal,but works with a control signal and it is level triggered
device.whereas flip flop is a 1 bit storage element and works with a clock signal.its a edge triggered
device. normally latches are avoided and flip flops are preferred.
WiMAX is a wireless digital communications system, also known as IEEE 802.16, that is intended
for wireless "metropolitan area networks". WiMAX can provide broadband wireless access (BWA)
up to 30 miles (50 km) for fixed stations, and 3 - 10 miles (5 - 15 km) for mobile stations. In contrast,
the WiFi/802.11 wireless local area network standard is limited in most cases to only 100 - 300 feet
(30 - 100m).
What is attenuation?
Explain AM and FM.
How does a mobile work?
What is crosstalk?
Where do we use AM and FM?
What is multiplexing?
Difference between CDMA and GSM.
These are the two different means of mobile communication being presently used
worldwide. The basicdifference lies in the Multiplexing method used in the aerial
communication i.e. from Mobile Tower to your mobile and vice versa.
CDMA uses Code Division Multiple Access as the name itself indicates, for example you
are in a hall occupied with number of people speaking different language. You will find
that the one language you know will be heard by you and the others will be treated like
noise. In the same manner each CDMA mobile communication takes place with a "code"
communicating between them and the other end if one is knowing that code then only it
can listen to the data being transmitted i.e. the communication is in the coded form.
On the other hand GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) uses narrowband
TDMA, which allows eight simultaneous calls on the same radio frequency. TDMA works
by dividing a radio frequency into time slots and then allocating slots to multiple calls. In
this way, a single frequency can support multiple, simultaneous data channels.
What is a repeater?
a. Frequency Division Multiplexing: In this technique, fixed frequency bands are allotted to every
user in the complete channel bandwidth. Such frequency is allotted to user on a continuous basis.
b. Time Division Multiplexing: When the pulse is present for the short time duration and most of
the time their is no signal present in-between them than this free space between the two pulses can
occupied by the pulses from other channels. This is known as Time Division Multiplexing.
9. What is Amplitude Modulation?
Ans: Amplitude Modulation is defined as the process in which the instantaneous value of the
amplitude of the carrier is varied according to the amplitude of the modulating or base band signal.
10. How can be aliasing be avoided?
Ans: Aliasing can be avoided if:
a. Sampling frequency must be greater than the frequency of the modulating signal.
b. The frequency should be band limited to maximum frequency of the signal(fm) Htz.
c. If pre-alias filter is used.
Microprocessor in comm.
Microprocessors are being used in a wide range of communication equipments. In telephone
industry , these are used in digital telephone sets. Telephone exchanges and modem etc. The use of
microprocessor in television, satellite communication have made teleconferencing possible. Railway
reservation and air reservation system also uses this technology. LAN and WAN for communication
of vertical information through computer network.