DC_Introduction
DC_Introduction
Communication
Indus University
Electronics and Communication Engineering Department
To introduce principles of Digital communication systems and
methods used in modulating and demodulating digital signals in
order to carry information from a source to a destination.
Text Books:
“Modern Digital and analog communication system” by
B.P.Lathi .Zhi Ding (international 4th Edition), OXFORD
university press.
Reference Books:
1) An Introduction to Analog and Digital Communications by
Simon Haykin, Wiley India.
3 ) D i g i t a l c o m m u n i c a t i o n - T h e o r y , Te c h n i q u e s a n d
Applications by R. N. Mutagi, 2nd edition,OXFORD university
press.
Main purpose of communication is to transfer information
from a source to a recipient via a channel or medium.
Recipient
Source: analog or digital data
Transmitter: transducer, amplifier, modulator, oscillator,
power amplifier, antenna
Channel: e.g. cable, optical fibre, free space
Receiver: antenna, amplifier, demodulator, oscillator,
power amplifier, transducer
Recipient: e.g. person, (loud) speaker, computer
Types of information
Voice, data, video, music, email etc.
Analog systems convert analog message into signals that can propagate
through the channel.
time
Amplitude
Digital signal
V1 Discrete time,
Discrete
amplitude
V2
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
time
Wireline (wired)
Telephony (voice, fax, modem, DSL)
Ethernet/LAN
Cable TV
Backplane copper links
Wireless (Electromagnetic)
Over the air communication
Radio and TV broadcast
WLAN
Cellular
Radar
Fiber optics
High speed long haul data communication
High traffic data transfer
Public Switched Telephone Network (landline, fax,modem)
Satellite & RADAR systems
Radio,TV broadcasting
Cellular phones, Smart phones- mobile communication
Computer networks (LANs, WANs, WLANs)
Brief Chronology of Communication
Systems
1844 Telegraph
1876 Telephony
1904 Radio
1923-1938 Television
1936 Armstrong’s case of FM radio
1938-1945 World War II Radar and microwave
systems
1948-1950 Information Theory and coding. C. E.
Shannon
1962 Satellite communications begins with Telstar I.
1962-1966 High Speed digital communication
1972 Motorola develops cellular telephone
Digital signals can be regenerated perfectly.
The use of regenerative repeater will detect the pulses and transmit
the new, clean pulses to next repeater station which does the same
process. If repaters are closely spaced then noise & distortions will be
within limits and hence pulses can be detected correctly. So digital
messages can be transmitted over long distance with relaibilty.
Time
(a)
Sampling
Amplitude instants
Detection
threshold
Time
(b)
Amplitude Regenerated
waveform
(c) Time
Quality of received signal depends on the carrier to noise ratio at
the receiver input.
Digital systems are easy to design with many design tools available.
Digital circuits are more dense and hence, systems can be compact.
Due to low power consumption more circuit can be put on smaller
silicon chip area.
• The process of adding patterns of redundancy (extra bits) into the transmission path in
order to lower the error rate is called channel coding.
• The channel coder performs error control coding.
Analog Source
Signal coder
Source Mux Channel Digital
coder modulator
Access RF sub-
system
control
Channel Digital
Demux decoder
Signal demodulator
Source
sink decoder
Digital
Analog Analog
Digital communication covers a broad area of communications techniques
including:
Digital transmission is the transmission of digital pulses between two or
more points in a communication system.
Digital radio is the transmitted of digital modulated analog carriers
between two or more points in a communication system.
Input source and input transducer
The source of information can be analog or digital, e.g. analog: audio or video
signal, digital: like teletype signal.
Source Encoder
The signal produced by source is converted into digital signal consists of 1′s and
0′s. For this we need source encoder. We should like to use as few binary digits
as possible to represent the signal. In such a way this efficient representation of
the source output results in little or no redundancy. This sequence of binary
digits is called information sequence.
E.g. take k bits of the information sequence and map that k bits to unique n
bit sequence called code word. The amount of redundancy introduced is
measured by the ratio n/k and the reciprocal of this ratio (k/n) is known as
rate of code or code rate.
Building blocks of Digital Communication
System
Digital Modulator:
The binary sequence is passed to digital modulator which in turns convert the
sequence into electric signals so that we can transmit them on channel. The
digital modulator maps the binary sequences into signal wave forms , for
example if we represent 1 by sin x and 0 by cos x then we will transmit sin x for
1 and cos x for 0.
Channel:
The communication channel is the physical medium that is used for transmitting
signals from transmitter to receiver.
Digital Demodulator:
The digital demodulator processes the channel corrupted transmitted
waveform and reduces the waveform to the sequence of numbers that
represents estimates of the transmitted data symbols.
Building blocks of Digital Communication
System
Channel Decoder:
This sequence of numbers then passed through the channel decoder which
attempts to reconstruct the original information sequence from the
knowledge of the code used by the channel encoder and the redundancy
contained in the received data.
Source Decoder:
Source decoder tries to decode the sequence from the knowledge of the
encoding algorithm. And which results in the approximate replica of the input
at the transmitter end.
Output Transducer:
Finally we get the desired signal in desired format analog or digital.
The modulation and coding used in a digital communication system depend
on the characteristics of the channel.
The two main characteristics of the channel are BANDWIDTH and POWER.
Disadvantages : Advantages :