The University of The South Pacific: Wireless Communications & Networks Homework 2 Date: June 2018 Dr. M. Assaf
The University of The South Pacific: Wireless Communications & Networks Homework 2 Date: June 2018 Dr. M. Assaf
Solution:
(3) When the Signal to Noise Ration SNR tends to infinity what happens?
As SNR -> infinity, an infinite information rate is theoretically possible
irrespective of the bandwidth of the channel.
(2) How many signaling levels are required to obtain this capacity?
Nyquist Theorem:
C=2B*log2(M) <=> 2^(C/2B)=M <=> M=4
(3) What would be the capacity if the environment starts suffering lesser
noise and the SNR goes up to 27 dB.
SNR(dB)=10*log10(SNR)<=>SNR=10^2.7<=>SNR=501 (approximately)
Shannon's Theorem:
C=B*log2(1+501)<=>C=18 Mbps (approximately)
Solution:
(1) What do you mean by Dynamic equalization and what problem does it
tackle?
Dynamic equalization is a method in which multiple delayed copies of the same signal
are combined at the receiver. It is usually a weighted process in which the delayed copies
of the signal are assigned weights dynamically before combining them. This method tries
to offset the affects caused due to multi-path which cause inter-symbol interference by
trying to reconstruct the original signal by using the multiple copies received.
(2) Why is it that, when you increase the data rate of a communications
system, typically, the error rate increases?
Suppose that the presence of a given noise pattern corrupts n bits. When we increase the
data rate, and looking at the time domain, the space between bits is shorter. So, if with the
same noise pattern, and everything else fixed, we double the data rate, then at least 2*n
bits would be corrupted.
Advantages:
-provides privacy via the use of random codes
-gain in immunity from various kinds of noise and multipath distortion
-share of the same bandwidth with multiple users
Disadvantages:
-complex implementation
-bandwidth inefficiency for small number of users
Solution:
(3) What would happen in (1) if the frequency was 900 MHz.
λ=0.333 => d=5932 m (approximately)
Solution: