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The Physical Layer

This document provides an overview of key concepts related to the physical layer of data communication. It discusses Fourier analysis and how it relates to bandwidth-limited signals and maximum data rate. It also covers Nyquist's theorem on sampling and Shannon's extension of this work to noisy channels. The document then examines various transmission media including magnetic media, twisted pair cabling, coaxial cable, fiber optics, wireless transmission methods using the electromagnetic spectrum, and communication satellites. Key aspects discussed for each medium include attenuation, distortion, noise, data rates, standards, and installation considerations.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9 views116 pages

The Physical Layer

This document provides an overview of key concepts related to the physical layer of data communication. It discusses Fourier analysis and how it relates to bandwidth-limited signals and maximum data rate. It also covers Nyquist's theorem on sampling and Shannon's extension of this work to noisy channels. The document then examines various transmission media including magnetic media, twisted pair cabling, coaxial cable, fiber optics, wireless transmission methods using the electromagnetic spectrum, and communication satellites. Key aspects discussed for each medium include attenuation, distortion, noise, data rates, standards, and installation considerations.

Uploaded by

13521145
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
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Chapter 2

The Physical Layer


The Theoretical Basis for Data
Communication
P Fourier Analysis
P Bandwidth-Limited Signals
P Maximum Data Rate of a Channel
Fourier Analysis

P Where f= 1/T which is the fundamental frequency


P an and bn are the sine and cosine amplitude of the nth harmonics
P c is a constant
Bandwidth Limited Signals

P A binary signal and its root-mean-square Fourier amplitudes.


P (b) % (c) Successive approximations to the original signal.
Bandwidth-Limited Signals (2)

P (d) % (e) Successive approximations to the original signal.


Bandwidth-Limited Signals (3)

P Relation between data rate and harmonics. Assuming 8 bit data


P b is the speed in bit per second
P T = 8/b seconds
P First Harmonics is b/8 Hz
P # of harmonics sent 3000/b/8 or 24000/b
Maximum Data Rate Channel
P 1924: Henry Nyquist realized that even a perfect channel has a finite
transmission capacity
P Nyquist derived the equation for the maximum data rate for a finite
bandwidth noiseless channel
P 1948: Claude Shanon (the Father of Information Theory) carried
Nyquist work and extend it to the case of a channel subject to
random noise
P Nyquist theorem states
< A signal of frequency f Hz can be reconstructed if sampled at 2f
sample/sec
< Maximum data rate = 2H log2(V) bits/sec
P Where
< H is the bandwith in Hz
< V is the number of discrete levels
P Example
< A 3K Hz channel transmitting a binary signal
< The maximum data rate is 2(3000) log2(2) = 6000 bits/sec
Maximum Data Rate Channel (2)
P Shanon extented Nyquist works because the maximum data rate
deteriorate quickly under noisy channel
P Shanon’s theorem
< Maximum number of bits per second = H log2(1 + S/N)
P Where
< H is the bandwidth
< S/N is the signal to noise ratio in dB
Guided Transmission Data

P Magnetic Media
P Twisted Pair
P Coaxial Cable
P Fiber Optics

Concept to look at
P Attenuation
P Distortion
P Noise
Magnetic Media

P Standard Ulrium tape holds about 200 GB of data


P A box would hold about 1000 of these tapes
P Total of 200 TB = 1600 Tb
P A box can be delivered anywhere is the US in 24 hours
< Bandwidth = 1600 Tb/84600 s = 19 Gbps
< No computer network can reach this!
Cable Specification
Speed, data type and distance (Ethernet)

P Speed : 10, 100, or 1000 Mbps


P Data Type : Digital - Baseband or
Analog - Broadband
P Distance (Cable Length) :
< T : 100 m
< 2 : 185 m
< 5 : 500 m
Wires
Coaxial

P RG - 58U : Black, slow (0.4c) , very flexible, 50 Ù


P RG - 8 : Black, Thick, slow (0.4c), 50 Ù
P RG-11 : Yellow, Thick, Fast (0.6c), 50 Ù
Twisted Pairs
Twisted Pairs (Shielded)

P Shielded Twisted Pairs


STP

P Screened Twisted Pairs


ScTP
Twisted Pairs
Twisted Pairs (Unshielded)

P UTP : less expensive, high


speed, simple cabling
P Uses RJ-45 connectors
UTP performance/standard
EIA/TIA-568-A

P CAT 1: 1 Mbps, Analog Voice


P CAT 2: 4 Mbps, Token Ring
P CAT 3: 16 Mbps, 10BaseT
P CAT 4: 20 Mbps, 16 Mhz Token ring
P CAT 5: 100 Mbps, Ethernet
P CAT 5E: 155 Mbps, Ethernet and ATM
P CAT 6: Up to 400 Mbps, Broadband
P CAT 7: 600 to 700 Mbps, Broadband
UTP Cabling
UTP Connection
Connector (RJ 45)

P Looks like RJ11 (Telephone)


P 8 pin connector)
UTP Cabling
EIA T568A or T568B
UTP Cable
Straight Through
UTP Cable
Crossover
Cable Usage

P Use straight-through cables for the following connections:


< Switch to router
< Switch to PC or server
< Hub to PC or server
P Use crossover cables for the following connections:
< Switch to switch
< Switch to hub
< Hub to hub
< Router to router
< PC to PC
< Router to PC
Cable Usage
Cable Usage
Cisco Notation
UTP other use
Rollover Cable (CISCO device management)
P Connection to manage Hubs, Repeaters or Routers
P RJ45 on the Hubs, Repeaters or Routers
P DB-9 on the PC (serial Port)
< 9600 bps, 8 bit, no parity, 1 stop bit, no flow control
P Connection
< 1-8
< 2-7
< 3-6
< 4-5
< 5-4
< 6-3
< 7-2
< 8-1
Optical media
Light is an electromagnetic energy

P All share the same property : wavelength


P All have the same speed : 300,000 km/s
P Human eyes can see : 400 - 700 nm
P Other invisible lights are used to transmit data : 850, 1310, 1550 nm
Electromagnetic spectrum
Electromagnetic spectrum
Electromagnetic spectrum
Electromagnetic spectrum
Electromagnetic spectrum
Visible Spectrum
Light Rays
Model

P Rays travel in straight line from the source


P Light rays travel at different speed in different medium
P Light ray crossing the boundary of two different material is called an
incident ray
P Light ray being reflected back is called a reflected ray
Index of Refraction
Optical density
P Light Rays can be bend
P Index of Refraction (n)
< Air : 1.000
< Glass : 1.523
< Diamond : 2.419
< Water : 1.333
Reflection
Light strikes a shiny surface

P Ray 1 : Incident Ray : è1 degree from Normal


P Ray 2 : Incident Ray : è2 degree from Normal
P Law of reflection : è1 = è2
Refraction
Light strikes an interface between two transparent
materials

P Ray 1 : Incident ray


P Ray 3 : Reflected ray
P Ray 2 : Refracted ray
P Law of reflection : è1 = è3
P Law of refraction : nglass > nair -> è2 > è1 -> n1/n2 = è2/è1
Total Internal Reflection

P A light ray inside a fiber optic cable must stay inside until it reached
the other end
P A ray must not refract -> all must be reflected
P “wave guide” of the light ray
Critical angle

P There is an incident angle èc where the ray will be reflected but not
refracted
P Ray 1 : è1 < èc : rays are reflected and refracted
P Ray 2 : è2 = èc : rays are reflected and refracted
P Ray 3 : è3 > èc : rays are reflected
Numerical Aperture and Mode

P Two parameter of a fiber optic design involves the control of


< Core material : n2
< Clading material: n1
P The rules are
< n2 > n1
< è > èc
P Numerical Aperture : a range of incident angle that is > èc
P Mode : light path
Critical Angle
Fiber Optic Structure
Single mode vs Multimode

P Multimode 50/125 or 62.5/125


P Single mode 5/125
Optical Cable Design
Transmission Device
Connectors and Cables
Signal Loss

P Scattering : microscopic non-uniformity (distortion)


P Absorbtion : microscopic impurities -> heat
P Manufacturing irregularities (roughness) in cladding and core
P Dispersion : chromatic dispersion (light traveling at slightly different
speed)
P Non-Ideal Source (LED and LASER)
< one frequency
< A range of wavelength
Installation Care
Improper Instalation

P Strectched and curved too


tightly
Fiber End Face Finish and Splicing
Transmission of Light through Fiber

P Attenuation of light through fiber in the infrared region.


Fiber Cables

P (a) Side view of a single fiber.


P (b) End view of a sheath with three fibers.
Fiber Cables (2)

P A comparison of semiconductor diodes and LEDs as light sources.


Fiber Optic Networks

P A fiber optic ring with active repeaters.


Fiber Optic Networks (2)

P A passive star connection in a fiber optics network.


Wireless Transmission

P The Electromagnetic Spectrum


P Radio Transmission
P Microwave Transmission
P Infrared and Millimeter Waves
P Lightwave Transmission
The Electromagnetic Spectrum
P Electron movements creates electromagnetic waves
P James Maxwell predicted this is 1865
P Heinrich Hertz is the who first observed this in 1887
P frequency is f : measured in Hz (in honor of Heinrich Hertz)
P The distance between two maxima (or minima) is called the
wavelength (designated as ë - lambda)
P All electromagnetic wave is travelling at light speed (c)
< 3x108 m/sec
< 1 ft/ns
P The relation is ëf = c
P Since c is constant and if ë in meters and f in MHz then ëf . 300
P Example
< 100 MHz wave is about 3 meters long
< 1000 MHz is about 0.3 meters
< 0.1 meter wave is about 3000 MHz
The Electromagnetic Spectrum

P The electromagnetic spectrum and its uses for communication.


Bandwidth
Carrying capacity

P Äf = frequency band
P Äë = width of a wavelength band
P c is the speed of light
P ë = wavelength
P Example :
< 1.3 ì wavelength (ë)
< 0.71 ì wavelength band (Äë)
< So Äf = 30 Thz
< If 8 bit per Hz -> 240 THz
Radio Transmission

P (a) In the VLF, LF, and MF bands, radio waves follow the curvature
of the earth.
P (b) In the HF band, they bounce off the ionosphere.
Antenna

P Antenna design is extremely important


P Effects:
< Range
< Covarage pattern
< Transmission efficiency
Microwave Transmission

P Above 100 MHz, the waves travels in a straight line


P A focused narrow beam gives much higher S/N ratio
P Require an aligned parabolic antenna
P MCI - Microwave Communication Inc
P Higher frequencis at 4GHz -> problem with absorption by water
Politics of the Electromagnetic Spectrum

P The ISM bands in the United States.


P International body : ITU-R
P USA -> FCC
< How to get frequency license?
– Beauty contest
– Lottery
– Auction
Lightwave Transmission

P Convection currents can interfere with laser communication


systems.
P A bidirectional system with two lasers is pictured here.
Communication Satellites
P Geostationary Satellites
P Medium-Earth Orbit Satellites
P Low-Earth Orbit Satellites
P Satellites versus Fiber

P Arthur C. Clarke describe a communication satelite system in 1945


Communication Satellites
P First people experiment to bounce signal off a metalized weather
baloon
P We have a permanent satelite - The Moon
< Navy built a communication system (ship to shore)
P Satelite has transponder : a microwave repeater
< Listen to a particular spectrum
< Amplify incoming signal
< Rebroadcast in different frequency (to avoid collision)
P The downward beam can be
< Broad or narrow (bent pipe mode)
P Altitude:
< 35800 km : 24 hrs
< 384000 km : one month (the moon)
< Orbital period >< altitude
Communication Satellites

P Communication satellites and some of their properties, including


altitude above the earth, round-trip delay time and number of
satellites needed for global coverage.
Geostationary Satellite
P Telstar 1962 (after transistor)
P 2 degree separation
< 360 degree -> 180 satellites
< ITU governs the parking space (orbital slot)
P Large (4000 kg) and consumes several kilowatt power
P Finite rocket motor fuel (about 10 years)
P Modern satellite has 40 transponders
P Large footprint (1/3 of earth area) for broadcast
P Transponder can be programmed for spot beam (small footprint)
< Elliptical
< Few hundred kms in diameter
Geostationary Satellite

P The principal satellite bands.


Geostationary Satellite

P VSAT: Very Small Aperture Terminal (1m)


P VSATs using a hub.
Medium Earth Orbit Satellite
P Lower Orbit than GEO (between the Van Allen belts)
P Smaller footprint
P Less power
P Orbiting about 18000 km -> 24 GPS satellites
Low-Earth Orbit Satellites Iridium

P (a) The Iridium satellites from six necklaces around the earth.
P (b) 1628 moving cells cover the earth.
P Each satellite has 48 spot beams and 3840 channels
P Total of 1628 cells and 253440 channels
Globalstar

P (a) Relaying in space.


P (b) Relaying on the ground.
Teledesic
P Iridium replacements
P Paul Allen and Craig McCaw (1990)
P 100 Mbps uplink and 720 Mbps downlink
P VSAT type
P Orbiting at 1350 km
P 30 satellites at Ka band
Satellite vs Fiber

P Fiber has more potential bandwidth


P Satellite advantages
< Mobile communication
< Broadcast
< Hostile or poorly developed terrain
< Coverage
< Rapid deployment
P Mainstream -> fiber optic with cellular radio
P Satellite for special usage
Public Switched Telephone System

P Structure of the Telephone System


P The Politics of Telephones
P The Local Loop: Modems, ADSL and Wireless
P Trunks and Multiplexing
P Switching
Structure of the Telephone System

P (a) Fully-interconnected network.


P (b) Centralized switch.
P (c) Two-level hierarchy.
Structure of the Telephone System (2)

P A typical circuit route for a medium-distance call.


Major Components of the Telephone System

P Local loops
< Analog twisted pairs going to houses and businesses
P Trunks
< Digital fiber optics connecting the switching offices
P Switching offices
< Where calls are moved from one trunk to another
The Politics of Telephones
P 164 LATA
P 1500 LEC

P The relationship of LATAs, LECs, and IXCs. All the circles are LEC
switching offices. Each hexagon belongs to the IXC whose number
is on it.
P 1984: AT&T becomes 23 Bell Operating Co (BOC)
The Local Loop: Modems, ADSL, and
Wireless

P The use of both analog and digital transmissions for a computer to


computer call. Conversion is done by the modems and codecs.
Transmission lines
P Suffer from
< Attenuation : loss of Energy
< Distortion
– Each harmonic travel at different speed
< Noise
– Thermal noise
– Crosstalk
– Atmospheric
– Solar system... etc
P Signal must be transmitted using AC waveforms to reduce problems
P Signal must be modulated
Modulation

P (a) A binary signal


P (b) Amplitude modulation

P (c) Frequency modulation


P (d) Phase modulation
Modem
P Modem : modulator - demodulator
P Inserted between computer and the analog telephone line
Bandwidth, Baud, Symbol, and Bit rate
P Bandwidth of a medium is the range of frequencies that pass through
it with minimum attenuation. Unit in Hz
P Baud rate is the number of samples per seconds. Each sample sends
one information or one symbol.
P Symbol rate is the same as baud rate
P Bit rate is the amount of information sent
< Symbols/sec times bits/symbol
P Example:
< Baud rate is 2400 samples/sec
< If each symbol contain only 0 and 1 -> 1 bit per symbol
< Then bit rate is 2400 bps
P Example (QPSK: Quadrature Phase Shift Keying)
< Baud rate is 2400 samples/sec
< Each symbol has 0, 1, 2, 3 volts -> 2 bit (4 possible combinations)
< Then bit rate is 4800 bps
Modem communication direction
P Simplex: one way
P Duplex: two way at the same time
P Half-duplex: two way, one way at a time
Modems (2)

P (a) QPSK.
P (b) Quadrature Amplitude Modulation : QAM-16.
P (c) QAM-64.
Modems (3)

(a) (b)
P (a) V.32 for 9600 bps.
P (b) V32 bis for 14,400 bps.
P V.90 achieved 56Kbps using 8000 samples/s with 7 bits
QAM-16 Gray Code Mapping
Digital Subscriber Line
P Telephone line was meant to carry voice between 300 to 3000 Hz
P The local loop is connected to a 3KHz filter.
P DSL works because the local loop is connected to a line that does not
have the filter
Digital Subscriber Lines

P Bandwidth versus distanced over category 3 UTP for DSL.


Digital Subscriber Lines (2)

P Operation of ADSL using discrete multitone modulation.


P By standard ANSI T1.413
< 8 Mbps downstream and 1 Mbps upstream
< Typical offers 512 Kbps downstream and 64 Kbps upstream
< Modulation v.34 with 4000 Baud instead of 2400 Baud
Digital Subscriber Lines (3)

P A typical ADSL equipment configuration.


Wireless Local Loops

P Architecture of an LMDS system.


P 1.3 GHz : Must avoid trees
Trunk and Frequency Division Multiplexing

P (a) The original bandwidths.


P (b) The bandwidths raised in frequency.
P (b) The multiplexed channel.
Wavelength Division Multiplexing

P Wavelength division multiplexing (WDM)


P 1990: 8 channels, each 2.5 Gbps, total 20 Gbps
P 1998: 40 channels, each 2.5 Gbps, total 100 Gbps
P 2001: 96 channels, each 10 Gbps, total 960 Gbps
P Theoritical limit: single fiber 25000 Ghz : 2500 10-Gbps channels
Time Division Multiplexing

P The T1 carrier (1.544 Mbps).


Time Division Multiplexing (2)

P Delta modulation.
Time Division Multiplexing (3)

P Multiplexing T1 streams into higher carriers.


Time Division Multiplexing (4)

P Two back-to-back SONET frames.


P Each block is a byte
Time Division Multiplexing (5)

P SONET and SDH multiplex rates.


Circuit Switching

P (a) Circuit switching.


P (b) Packet switching.
Message Switching

P (a) Circuit switching (b) Message switching (c) Packet switching


Packet Switching

P A comparison of circuit switched and packet-switched networks.


The Mobile Telephone System

P First-Generation Mobile Phones: Analog Voice


P Second-Generation Mobile Phones: Digital Voice
P Third-Generation Mobile Phones:Digital Voice and Data
Advanced Mobile Phone System

P (a) Frequencies are not reused in adjacent cells.


P (b) To add more users, smaller cells can be used.
Channel Categories
P The 832 channels are divided into four categories:
< Control (base to mobile) to manage the system
< Paging (base to mobile) to alert users to calls for them
< Access (bidirectional) for call setup and channel assignment
< Data (bidirectional) for voice, fax, or data
Call management
P Each cell phone has 32 bit serial number and 10 digit phone number in
its PROM
P Telephone number
< Area code 3 digit -> 10 bit
< Phone number 7 digit -> 24 bit
< Total 34 bit
P Phone send announcement (serial number and phone number)
P Base station or MTSO (Mobile Telephone Switching Office) will
< Record the cell phone
< Inform the “customer home MTSO” of its current location
D-AMPS
Digital Advanced Mobile Phone System

P (a) A D-AMPS channel with three users.


P (b) A D-AMPS channel with six users.
GSM
Global System for Mobile Communications

P GSM uses 124 frequency channels, each of which uses an eight-slot


TDM system
GSM (2)

P A portion of the GSM framing structure.


CDMA % Code Division Multiple Access

P (a) Binary chip sequences for four stations


P (b) Bipolar chip sequences
P (c) Six examples of transmissions
P (d) Recovery of station C’s signal
Third-Generation Mobile Phones:
Digital Voice and Data
P Basic services an IMT-2000 network should provide
P High-quality voice transmission
P Messaging (replace e-mail, fax, SMS, chat, etc.)
P Multimedia (music, videos, films, TV, etc.)
P Internet access (web surfing, w/multimedia.)
Cable Television

P Community Antenna Television


P Internet over Cable
P Spectrum Allocation
P Cable Modems
P ADSL versus Cable
Community Antenna Television

P An early cable television system.


Internet over Cable

P Cable television
Internet over Cable (2)

P The fixed telephone system.


Spectrum Allocation

P Frequency allocation in a typical cable TV system used for Internet


access
P 6 MHz with QAM-64 -> 36 MHz, subtract overhead we got 27 MHz
Cable Modems

P Typical details of the upstream and downstream channels in North


America.

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