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Ch-1 Introduction To Communication Systems

The document provides an overview of communication systems, including definitions, classifications, and essential components such as transmitters, channels, and receivers. It discusses the analysis of signals in the frequency domain using Fourier transforms, as well as the concepts of baseband signal transmission and distortion. Additionally, it covers radio wave propagation modes and the advantages and disadvantages of analog and digital communication systems.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
3 views46 pages

Ch-1 Introduction To Communication Systems

The document provides an overview of communication systems, including definitions, classifications, and essential components such as transmitters, channels, and receivers. It discusses the analysis of signals in the frequency domain using Fourier transforms, as well as the concepts of baseband signal transmission and distortion. Additionally, it covers radio wave propagation modes and the advantages and disadvantages of analog and digital communication systems.

Uploaded by

wekofi3512
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Debre Markos University

Debre Markos Institute of Technology

School of Electrical and Computer Engineering


Introduction to Communication Systems (ECEg 4132)
Analysis and transmission of signals

By: Gebey A.

1 13/05/2024
Outline

 Communication

 Communication Systems

 Classification of Communication Systems

 Elements of Communication system

 Representation of deterministic signals in frequency domain

 Signal transmission in Baseband

 Distortion & distortion less transmission

 Radio wave propagation

2 13/05/2024
Communication
What is communication?

 Communication is a process of transmitting information from one point to another

point (i.e. from source to intended receiver).

 It should be efficient, reliable and secured.

 Communication can be between humans, between machine and human or between

machines.

 Communication can be electronic or non electronic types.

 Electronic-communication uses electronic devices to transmit information and the

information carriers are electrical signals.


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Communication
 Examples:- phone calls, faxes, text messages, video messages, emails and internet

messaging.

 Non electronic communication

 does not use electronic devices to transmit information so that the information

carriers are not electrical signals.


 Written letters, face-to-face conversations, using sign, brochures etc.

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Communication System
 Communication System : Integration of components which facilitate the process

of communication. Or

 It is a group (collection) of subsystems such us

 transmission subsystem,

 channel and

 receiver subsystem.

 They are designed and assembled in a proper manner for sending and receiving

information signals.

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Classification of electronic communication
 Based on direction of communication:
 Simplex
 half duplex or full duplex
 Based on nature/type of information signal:
 Analog or
 digital communication
 Based on the type of channel used:
 Wired or
 Wireless
 Based on techniques of transmission :
 Baseband or
 pass band/communication using modulation

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Classification of electronic communication systems
Based on the direction of communication

1. Simplex
 One way data communication only. rarely and carefully used as no back way to
send error.
 Examples :- live broadcasting (Radio and TV), interface of keyboard in computer

2. Half Duplex
 Can send and receive but not at the same time. Example:- Walkie-Talkie

3. Full Duplex
 Data can transfer in both direction simultaneously. Example :- Mobile
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Elements of Communication System
 The three essential components/elements for every communication system are:

 Transmitter

 Channel

 Receiver

Figure-1: Elements of a communication systems

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Elements of Communication System
 Figure-1 can be modified as follow:

Figure-2: Basic model of communication system

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Elements of Communication System
Source of Information

 Information may take many forms: computer data, image, voice, music, video.

 The message produced by the information source is not an electrical in nature. So

we need a transducer.

Input transducer

 Converts information source to electrical signals.

 (these signals are called baseband signals or message signal or modulating signal

or Audio frequency signal). Example: Microphone, Camera, Keyboard

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Transmitter

 Convert the message signal produced by the source of information into a form

suitable for transmission over the channel.

 Example: modulation and encoding

 Other functions performed: Amplification, filtering

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Channel(Transmission medium)
 It is the path through which the signal propagates from transmitter to receiver.

 It may be wired or wireless

 Wired: copper, coaxial cable, optical fibers.

 Wireless: microwave links or radio waves or space. E.g. mobile radio

channels, satellite channels.

12 13/05/2024
 Every channel introduces some amount of Transmission loss or attenuation, so the

signal power progressively decreases with increasing distance.

 This is reason that the transmitter signal is degraded.

 Losses caused by

 Noise

 Electrical interference

 Distortion due to non-linearity

 Electromagnetic discharges such as lightning, power line discharge and etc.

13 13/05/2024
Receiver
 It receives information. For example all TV sets and radios are receivers.
 As the transmitted signal propagates along the channel, it is distorted due to
channel imperfections.
 Noise and interfering signals (originating from other sources) are added to the
channel output and thus received signal is a corrupted version of the transmitted
signal.
 Hence the receiver has the task of reconstructing a recognizable form of the
original message signal for a user.
 Demodulator

 Amplifier

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Output transducer

 used to convert electrical signal into appropriate message.

 Speaker

 Monitor

15 13/05/2024
Types of communication systems
II. Based on the nature of signal and the type of modulation used, communication can
be classified as
 analog and

 digital

Analog Communication system


 Are designed to transmit and receive only analog information using analog modulations
techniques (AM, FM, PM, PPM, PDM, PPM).
 transmit a continuous (uncountably infinite) range of signals.

 voice and video are natural analog information sources.

16 13/05/2024
Analog Communication system

or

Figure-3: Block diagram of analog communication system


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Types of communication systems
Digital Communication System
 Are designed to transmit and receive only digital information using digital

modulations techniques (ASK, FSK, PSK, DM).

 transmit a finite number of signals/ non-continuous stream of on/off pulses.

 text and data are naturally digital information sources.

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Figure-4: Block Diagram of a digital communication system
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Advantages of digital communication
 Relatively inexpensive digital circuits may be used.

 Privacy is preserved by using data encryption.

 Data from voice, video, and data sources may be merged and transmitted over a

common digital transmission system.

 In long-distance systems, noise does not accumulate from repeater to repeater.

 Errors are easy to detect even when there is a large amount of noise on the

received signal.

 Errors may often be corrected by the use of coding.

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Disadvantages of digital communication

 Much more bandwidth is required than that for analog systems.

 Synchronization is required.

 However, The advantages of digital communication systems usually outweigh

their disadvantages. Consequently, digital systems are becoming dominant.

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Applications of AC Applications of DC
 Television  Image processing for pattern
 Radio recognition, robotic vision and image
 Wireless enhancement
 Satellite Communication  Digital signal processing

 Radar  Military application for security

 Space communication where


spacecraft transmits information to
earth

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Why are communication systems designed?
 In short, communication systems are designed to transmit information.

 Communication system designers have four main concerns:

1. Selection of the information-bearing waveform/ signal

2. Bandwidth and power of the waveform

3. Effect of system noise on the received information

4. Cost of the system.

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Analysis of deterministic signals in frequency domain
 Deterministic signals are those signals whose values are completely specified for
any given time. E.g. sine and cosine wave, ramp signal, delta function,
exponential wave, pulse etc…
 Two methods/mathematical tools used to analyze the signals in frequency domain
are:
 Fourier series

 Fourier transform

 Fourier series (for periodic signals)

 Fourier transform (for both non periodic and periodic signals)


24 13/05/2024
Analysis of deterministic signals in frequency domain

 Fourier transforms allow you to represent a signal in the frequency domain,

which is essential for tasks such as:


 Signal processing,

 Modulation and demodulation

 Filtering, and understanding the behavior of linear time-invariant systems.

 Separate the desired signals from undesired signals. Those signals are often in

different frequencies, so they are easy to separate in frequency domain, but hard
to separate in time domain.

25 13/05/2024
Analysis of deterministic signals in frequency domain

 In communication systems, we often deal with non-periodic signals. So. We focus

of analysis of deterministic signals using Fourier transform .

 Let g(t) denote a non periodic deterministic signal, expressed as some function of

time t.

 The Fourier transform of the signal g(t) is given by the integral;

 This equation is the analysis equation.

26 13/05/2024
Cont…
 The original signal g(t) is recovered exactly using the formula for the inverse

Fourier transform:

 This is the synthesis equation.

27 13/05/2024
Cont…
Example1: Consider a box function or rectangular pulse of duration T and
amplitude A,

which stands for a rectangular function of unit amplitude and unit duration centered
at 0.

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Cont…

Figure 6: (a) Rectangular pulse. (b) Amplitude spectrum

29 13/05/2024
Signal transmission in Baseband

 Baseband is the range of frequencies occupied by a signal that has not been

modulated to higher frequencies.

 Baseband signals typically originate from transducers, converting some other

variable into an electrical signal.

 For example, the electronic output of a microphone is a baseband signal that is

analogous to the applied voice audio.

30 13/05/2024
Signal transmission in Baseband Signal
 In baseband communication, baseband signals are transmitted without modulation
(i.e. without any shift in the range of frequencies of the signal ).
 These signals cannot be transmitted over a radio link because of low frequency
content.
 They are suitable for transmission over a pair of wires, coaxial cables and
optical fibers.
 Example: local telephone communication, short haul PCM and long distance
PCM over optical fiber use baseband communication.
 Since baseband signals have overlapping bands, they would interfere severely if
sharing a common channel.
31 13/05/2024
Signal Transmission Through a Linear Time Invariant
(LTI) System

32 13/05/2024
Cont…

33 13/05/2024
Signal Distortion during Transmission
 In signal processing, distortion is the alteration of the original shape (or other

characteristic) of a signal.

 In communications and electronics it means the alteration of the waveform of an

information-bearing signal, such as an audio signal representing sound or a video


signal representing images, in an electronic device or communication channel.

 Distortion is usually unwanted, and so engineers strive to eliminate or minimize

it.

34 13/05/2024
Linear and Nonlinear distortion
 A linear distortion is defined as a change in amplitude or phase with no new

frequencies added.

 A non-linear distortion occurs when new frequency components are generated.

 Non-linear distortions are what is usually meant by "distortion".

35 13/05/2024
Distortion less Transmission

36 13/05/2024
Cont…

37 13/05/2024
Electromagnetic wave propagation
Radio Waves Generation
 When a high-frequency alternating current (AC) passes through a copper

conductor, it generates radio waves which are propagated into the air using an
antenna.

38 13/05/2024
Cont…

 Radio waves (in wireless communications) are generated by an antenna

and they propagate in all directions as a straight line.

 Radio waves travel at a velocity of 186.000 miles per second (speed of

light).

 Radio waves become weaker as they travel a long distance.

39 13/05/2024
Modes of Wave Propagation
 There are 3 modes of propagation:
 Ground wave propagation – for low frequency waves (less than 2MHz)

 Sky wave propagation mode – long distance high frequency waves (<30MHz)

 Space wave– for high frequency waves (>30 MHz)


I. Ground wave propagation/ surface wave
 A surface wave is an Earth-guided electromagnetic wave that travels over the
surface of Earth.
 This wave exists when both transmitting and receiving antennas are close to the
earth and the antennas are vertically polarized.

40 13/05/2024
I. Ground wave propagation/ surface wave

 It is useful at low frequency broadcast application.

 The wave is attenuated as it propagates due to imperfect nature of the earth,

 The attenuation is mainly as a result of the absorption and reflection of EM

energy by the earth.

Figure 7: Ground wave between transmitting and receiving antenna


41 13/05/2024
II. Sky wave propagation
 Electromagnetic (EM) waves directed upward at some angle from the earth’s

surface are called sky waves.


 Electromagnetic waves that are directed above the horizon level.

 Typically, sky wave are radiated in a direction that produces a relatively large
angle with reference to Earth.
 Sky waves are radiated toward the sky, where they are either reflect or refracted
back to Earth by the ionosphere.
 The ionosphere is the region of space located approximately 50 -400 km above
the Earth’s surface.

42 13/05/2024
II. Sky wave propagation
 The ionosphere layer absorbs large quantities of the sun’s radiant energy, which

ionizes the air molecules and creating free electron.

Figure 8: Sky waves propagation


43 13/05/2024
III. Space wave propagation / tropospheric wave
 The wave propagates directly from the transmitter to the receiver in the

troposphere region (16km above the earth).

 It includes both direct and ground reflected.

 Direct waves / line of sight (LOS) transmission travel essentially in a straight

line between the transmit and receive antennas. .

 Therefore, direct space wave propagation is limited by the curvature of the Earth.

 Ground-reflected waves are waves reflected by Earth’s surface as they propagate

between the transmit and receive antennas.

44 13/05/2024
III. Space wave propagation

Figure 9: Space waves propagation


 This is useful for frequencies above 30MHz.

 FM reception is normally by space wave propagation.

 It is also used for FM,TV,VHF and UHF bands and radar applications.

45 13/05/2024
Thank You!!!
Any Question?

46 13/05/2024

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