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Chapter 2 The Physical Layer. Data Communication Information can be transmitted on wires by varying...
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Transcript of Chapter 2 The Physical Layer. Data Communication Information can be transmitted on wires by varying...
Chapter 2The Physical Layer
Data Communication
• Information can be transmitted on wires by varying some physical property such as voltage, current or light. • By representing the value of this voltage or current as a single-valued function of time, f(t), we can model the behavior of the signal and analyze it mathematically.
transmitter receiver
bits bitstransmission medium
• electric current•light•electromagnetic waves
computer 1 computer 2
Tn dtnfttgT
a 0 )2sin()(2 T
n dtnfttgT
b 0 )2cos()(2
11)2cos()2sin(
21
)(n
nn
n nftbnftactg
Any reasonably behaved periodic function, g(t), with period T can be constructed by summing a (possibly infinite) number of sines and cosines:
Signal Analysis Using Fourier Series
where f=1/T is the fundamental frequency and an and bn are the sine and cosine amplitudes of the nth harmonics.
Example : Digital Signal Analysis
Digital Signal
Spectral Analysis
One harmonic
Two harmonics
Digital Signal Synthesis
Four harmonics
Eight harmonics
Maximum Data Rate or Capacity of a Communication Channel
1. Noiselss Channel Case : Nyquist’s Theorem
Maximum capacity ( C ) = 2 H log2 V bits/sec
bandwidthnumber of signal levels
If random noise is present, the situation deteriorates rapidly. The amount of thermal noise present is measured by the ratio of the signal power to the noise power, called the signal-to-noise ratio (S/N).
2. Noisy Channel Case: Shannon’s Theorem
Maximum Capacity ( C ) =H log2(1+S/N)
Maximum Data Rate or Capacity of a Communication Channel
signal noise signal + noise
signal noise signal + noise
HighSNR
LowSNR
SNR = Average Signal Power
Average Noise Power
SNR (dB) = 10 log10 SNR
t t t
t t t
Numerical Example 1:
1. Noiseless channel case: Bandwidth H = 3000 HzVoltage Levels V = 4 ( two binary bits) Then, C = 2H log 2 (V) = 2 * 3000 log 2 (4) bps.
= 12000 bps.
2. Noisy channel case: Bandwidth H = 3000 HzVoltage Levels V = 4 S/ N = 20 dB 20 = 10 log 10 (S/ N) S/ N = 100
Then, C = H log 2 ( 1 + S/N ) =
= 3000 log 2 (1 + 100)
= 19800 bps.
1. Noiseless channel case: Bandwidth H = 3000 HzVoltage Levels V = 8 ( three binary bits) Then, C = 2H log 2 (V) = 2 * 3000 log 2 (8) bps.
= 18000 bps.
2. Noisy channel case: Bandwidth H = 3000 HzS/ N = 20 dBThen, 20 = 10 log 10 (S/ N)
S/ N = 100C = H log 2 ( 1 + S/N ) =
= 3000 log 2 (1 + 100)
= 19800 bps.
Numerical Example 2:
Transmission Media
Transmission medium:: the physical path between transmitter and receiver.
1. Guided media :: waves are guided along a physical path (e.g, twisted pair, coaxial cable and optical fiber)
2. Unguided media :: means for transmitting but not guiding electromagnetic waves (e.g., the atmosphere and outer space).
Transmission Media
Connectors
Guided Transmission Data
• Magnetic Tapes• Coaxial Cable• Twisted Pair• Fiber Optics
Bandwidth:A tape can hold 7 gigabytes. A box can hold about 1000 tapes. Assume a box can be delivered in 24 hours.The effective bandwidth=7*1000*8/86400=648 MbpsCostCost of 1000 tapes= $5000. If a tape can be reused 10 times and the shipping cost is $ 200, we have a cost of $ 700 to ship 7000 gigabytes.
Magnetic Tapes
Coaxial Cable
Coaxial Cables Types10Base5 Thick Ethernet ::
thick (10 mm) coax 10 Mbps, 500 m. max segment length, 100 devices/segment, awkward to handle and install.
10Base2 Thin Ethernet :: thin (5 mm) coax 10 Mbps, 185 m. max segment length, 30 devices/segment, easier to handle,
Coaxial Cable Applications
• Television distribution—Ariel to TV—Cable TV
• Long distance telephone transmission—Can carry 10,000 voice calls simultaneously—Being replaced by fiber optic
• Short distance computer systems links• Local area networks
Twisted Pair Cables
• Unshielded Twisted Pair (UTP)—Ordinary telephone wire—Cheapest—Easiest to install—Suffers from external EM interference
• Shielded Twisted Pair (STP)—Metal braid or sheathing that reduces
interference—More expensive—Harder to handle (thick, heavy)
UTP Categories
(a). Category 3 UTP.(b). Category 5 UTP.
• Cat 3—up to 16MHz—Voice grade found in most offices—Twist length of 7.5 cm to 10 cm
• Cat 5—up to 100MHz—Commonly pre-installed in new office buildings—Twist length 0.6 cm to 0.85 cm
UTP Categories
Twisted Pair Applications• Most common medium
• Telephone network—Between house and local exchange (subscriber
loop)
• Within buildings—To private branch exchange (PBX)
• For local area networks (LAN)—10Mbps or 100Mbps
10BASE-T
10 Mbps baseband transmission over twisted pair.Two Cat 3 cables, Manchester encoding,Maximum distance - 100 meters
Ethernet hub
Baseband and Broadband
Fiber Optics• Optical fiber :a thin flexible medium capable of
conducting optical rays. Optical fiber consists of a very fine cylinder of glass (core) surrounded by concentric layers of glass (cladding).
• a signal-encoded beam of light (a fluctuating beam) is transmitted by total internal reflection.
• Total internal reflection occurs in the core because it has a higher optical density (index of refraction) than the cladding.
Fiber Cables
(a). Side view of a single fiber.(b). End view of a sheath with three fibers.
Total Internal Reflection
(a). Three examples of a light ray from inside a silica fiber impinging on the air/silica boundary at different angles.
(b). Light trapped by total internal reflection.
Fiber Optic Networks
A fiber optic ring with active repeaters.
Optical Fiber - Benefits• Greater capacity (Gbps)
• Smaller size & weight
• Lower attenuation
• Electromagnetic isolation
• Greater repeater spacing ( 10s of Km)
Optical Fiber - Applications• Long-haul trunks
• Metropolitan trunks
• Rural exchange trunks
• Subscriber loops
• LANs
Optical Fiber Transmission Modes
Optical Fibers Devices
• Light Emitting Diode (transmitter)—Cheaper—Wider operating temp range—Last longer—Used with multimode fiber optics
• Injection Laser Diode (transmitter)—More efficient—Greater data rate—Used with single mode fiber optics
• PIN Photo-Diode (Receiver)
Wireless Transmission
• The Electromagnetic Spectrum• Radio Transmission• Microwave Transmission• Infrared and Millimeter Waves• Lightwave Transmission
Computer Networks by R.S. Chang, Dept. CSIE, NDHU 35
Electromagnetic Waves
speed=frequencywavelength
m/s=cycles/s m/cycles
one cycle
Hz(hertz)
speed of light (in vacuum)=3 108 m / s
cf
Computer Networks by R.S. Chang, Dept. CSIE, NDHU 36
The Electromagnetic Spectrum
Computer Networks by R.S. Chang, Dept. CSIE, NDHU 37
ISM (Industrial/Scientific/Medical) BandTransmitters using these bands do not require government licensing. One band is allocated worldwide: 2.400-2.484 GHz. In addition, in the US and Canada, bands also exist from 902-928 MHz and from 5.725-5.850 GHz. These bands are used for cordless telephones, garage door openers, wireless hi-fi speakers, security gates, etc.
Wireless Transmission Frequencies
• 2GHz to 40GHz ( Microwave, Satellite) • 30MHz to 1GHz ( Broadcast radio ) • 3 x 1011 to 2 x 1014 ( Infrared)
Antennas• Electrical conductor used to radiate or collect electromagnetic
energy. Same antenna often used for both transmission and reception
• Transmission
—Radio frequency energy from transmitter—Converted to electromagnetic energy by antenna—Radiated into surrounding environment
• Reception
—Electromagnetic energy impinging on antenna—Converted to radio frequency electrical energy—Fed to receiver
Computer Networks by R.S. Chang, Dept. CSIE, NDHU 39
• Radio waves are easy to generate, can travel long distance, and penetrate buildings easily, so they are widely used for communication, both indoors and outdoors.
• Radio waves are also omnidirectional, meaning that they travel in all directions from the source, so that the transmitter and receiver do not have to be carefully aligned physically.
Radio Transmission
(a). In the VLF, LF, and MF bands, radio waves follow the curvature of the earth.
(b). In the HF band, they bounce off the ionosphere.
Radio Transmission
Computer Networks by R.S. Chang, Dept. CSIE, NDHU 41
• Above 100 MHz, the waves travel in straight lines and can therefore be narrowly focused. Concentrating all the energy into a small beam using a parabolic antenna gives a much higher signal to noise ratio.• Since the microwaves travel in a straight line, if the towers are too far apart, the earth will get in the way. Consequently, repeaters are needed periodically.
Microwave Transmission
Computer Networks by R.S. Chang, Dept. CSIE, NDHU 42
Disadvantages:•do not pass through buildings well•multipath fading problem (the delayed waves cancel the signal)•absorption by rain above 8 GHz•severe shortage of spectrum
Advantages:•no right way is needed (compared to wired media)•relatively inexpensive•simple to install
Computer Networks by R.S. Chang, Dept. CSIE, NDHU 43
. Unguided infrared and millimeter waves are widely used for short-range communication. The remote controls used on televisions, VCRs, and stereos all use infrared communication.
. They are relatively directional, cheap, and easy to build, but have a major drawback: they do not pass through solid objects.
. This property is also a plus. It means that an infrared system in one room will not interfere with a similar system in adjacent room. It is more secure against eavesdropping.
Infrared and Millimeter Transmission
Convection currents can interfere with laser communication systems. A bidirectional system with two lasers is pictured here.
Communication Satellites
• Satellite is relay station
• Satellite receives on one frequency, amplifies or repeats signal and transmits on another frequency
• Types based on orbital altitude:
—Geostationary Orbit Satellites (GEO) —Medium-Earth Orbit Satellites (MEO) —Low-Earth Orbit Satellites (LEO)
• Applications : Television, Long distance telephone, Private business networks
Satellite Point to Point Link
Satellite Broadcast Link
Satellites Types
Communication satellites and some of their properties,including altitude above the earth, round trip delay time andnumber of satellites needed for global coverage.
Satellites versus fiber cables • High bandwidth available for individual users. • More suitable for mobile communication
• Naturally suited for broadcast applications
• Better suited for connecting remote areas.
Wired Ethernet LAN
Wired LAN Digital Signal Encoding
The following Schemes to encode frame bitsinto voltage or light signals for transmission
Through guided media:
•Nonreturn to Zero-Level (NRZ-L)•Nonreturn to Zero Inverted (NRZI)•Manchester•Differential Manchester•Bipolar -AMI•Pseudo ternary
Binary Encoding Schemes
• Non-return to Zero-Level (NRZ-L)
• Non-return to Zero Inverted (NRZI)
1 negative voltage0 positive voltage
1 existence of a signal transition at the beginning of the bit time (either a low-to-high or a high-to-low transition)
0 no signal transition at the beginning of the bit time
Coding Example
More Encoding Schemes
• Manchester
• Differential Manchester
0 low-to-high transition
1 high-to-low transition
1 absence of transition at the beginning of the bit interval
0 presence of transition at the beginning of the bit interval
Coding Example
Bipolar-AMI—zero represented by no line signal—one represented by positive or negative pulse—one pulses alternate in polarity
Pseudo-ternary• One represented by absence of line signal• Zero represented by alternating positive and
negative• No advantage or disadvantage over bipolar-AMI
More Encoding Schemes
Coding Example
0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1
Communication Network Example:The Public Telephone Network WAN
WAN Communication Networks Example: Public Telephone
Network
(a). Fully-interconnected network.(b). Centralized switch.(c). Two-level hierarchy.
Telephone subscribers connected to local CO (central office)
Tandem & Toll switches connect CO’s
Hierarchical Network Structure
Tandem
CO
Toll
CO COCO
CO
Tandem
CO = central office
Major Components of the Telephone System
I. Local loops Analog twisted pairs going to houses and
businesses
II. Trunks Digital fiber optics connecting the switching
offices
III. Switching offices Where calls are moved from one trunk to
another
Structure of the Telephone System
A typical circuit route for a medium-distance call.
Connecting Computers (Dial-Up)
I. The Local Loop• This is the connection from the local switching station to
houses.• This is ultimately what controls the transmission speed to
houses.
Transmission Problems: Attenuation - the loss of energy as the signal
propagates. Delay Distortion - different frequencies travel at
different speeds so the wave form spreads out. Noise - unwanted energy that combines with the signal
- difficult to tell the signal from the noise.ModulationTo get around the problems associated with digital signaling, analog signaling is used. A continuous tone in the 1000 to 2000 Hz range, called a sine wave carrier is introduced. We vary the carrier to represent different signal (data).
Telephone Setup
Analog and Digital Transmissions
The use of both analog and digital transmissions for a computer to computer call. Conversion is done by the modems and codecs.
Modems
Modulation Techniques
(a). A binary signal (b). Amplitude modulation
(c). Frequency modulation(d). Phase modulation
II. Trunks And Multiplexing
The cost of a wire is pretty much constant, independent of the bandwidth of that wire - costs come from installation and maintenance of the physical space (digging, etc.). So, how can we stuff more through that medium? The answer is :
Multiplexing
B B
C C
A A
B
C
A
B
C
A
MUXMUX
(a) (b)
Trunkgroup
Time Division Multiplexing: TDMA
Frequency
time
4 users
Example:
Time sharing multiplexing
Example on TDMA
TDMA: time division multiple access a) access to channel in "rounds" b) each station gets fixed length slot (length = pkt trans time) in each round c) unused slots go idle d) example: 6-station LAN, 1,3,4 have pkt, slots 2,5,6 idle
e) TDM (Time Division Multiplexing): channel divided into N time slots, one per user; inefficient with low duty cycle users and at light load.
f) FDM (Frequency Division Multiplexing): frequency subdivided.
Multiplexing T1 streams into higher carriers.
The T links
Frequency Division Multiplexing: FDMA
Channel spectrum divided into frequency bands
frequency
time
4 users
Example:
5: DataLink Layer
Example on FDMA
each station assigned fixed frequency band unused transmission time in frequency bands go idle example: 6-station LAN, 1,3,4 have pkt, frequency bands 2,5,6 idle
TDM (Time Division Multiplexing): channel divided into N time slots, one per user; inefficient with low duty cycle users and at
light load.FDM (Frequency Division Multiplexing): frequency subdivided.
frequ
ency
bands time
A CBf
Cf
Bf
Af
H
H
H
0
0
0
(a) Individual signals occupy H Hz
(b) Combined signal fits into channel bandwidth
Example on FDMA
(a). The original bandwidths.(b). The bandwidths raised in frequency.(b). The multiplexed channel.
Example on FDMA
Wavelength Division Multiplexing (Used with Fiber)
III. Switching
This is what happens inside the phone company - the various wires or fibers interconnect the switching centers. Methods of switching include:
Circuit Switching: A connection (electrical, optical, radio) is established from the caller phone to the callee phone. This happens BEFORE any data is sent.
Packet Switching: Divides the message up into blocks (packets). Therefore packets use the transmission lines for only a short time period - allows for interactive traffic.
Message Switching: The connection is determined only when there is actual data (a message) ready to be sent. The whole message is re-collected at each switch and then forwarded on to the next switch. This method is called store-and-forward. This method may tie up routers for long periods of time - not good for interactive traffic.
Fully Interconnected Network( No Switching Case)
For N users to be fully connected directly Requires N(N – 1)/2 connections Requires too much space for cables Inefficient & costly since connections not
always on
N = 1000N(N – 1)/2 = 499500
1
2
34
N
. . .
Circuit Switching
•A connection (electrical, optical, radio) is established from the caller phone to the callee phone. This happens BEFORE any data is sent.
•fixed bandwidth
•route fixed at setup
•idle capacity wasted
. Example: Telephones
Manual Circuit Switching
Patchcord panel switch invented in 1877Operators connect users on demand
Establish circuit to allow electrical current to flow from inlet to outlet
Only N connections required to central office
1
23
N – 1
N
Manual Circuit Switching
Packet Switching
. Divides the message up into blocks (packets).
•The connection is determined only when there is actual packet ready to be sent.
•The packet is re-collected at each switch and then forwarded on to the next switch. . Packets use the transmission lines for only a short time period.
. Example: Postal Service
Circuit Switching vs. Packet Switching
Dedicated fixed bandwidth route fixed at setup idle capacity
wasted network state
Best Effort end-to-end control multiplexing
technique re-route capability congestion
problems
(a). Circuit switching.(b). Packet switching.
Circuit Switching vs. Packet Switching
circuit switched vs. packet-switched networks.
Message Switching
•The connection is determined only when there is actual data (a message) ready to be sent.
•The whole message is re-collected at each switch and then forwarded on to the next switch.
•This method is called store-and-forward.
•This method may tie up routers for long periods of time - not good for interactive traffic.
Message Switching
(a). Circuit switching (b). Message switching (c). Packet switching