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An Introduction to Computer Networks

An Introduction to Computer Networks. Lecture 5: Physical Layer. University of Tehran Dept. of EE and Computer Engineering By: Dr. Nasser Yazdani. Outline. Concepts: Data signal Links Link functions Modulation Shannon’s Theorem Transmission media. Data.

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An Introduction to Computer Networks

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  1. An Introductionto Computer Networks Lecture 5: Physical Layer University of Tehran Dept. of EE and Computer Engineering By: Dr. Nasser Yazdani Introduction to Computer Network

  2. Outline • Concepts: • Data • signal • Links • Link functions • Modulation • Shannon’s Theorem • Transmission media Introduction to Computer Network

  3. Data • Discrete data: an instance is binary. Computer works with discrete data. Discrete is encoded in 0s and 1s. • Continuous data: change with time or space. • It is converted to discrete data by sampling • Data is delivered by signals in the links Introduction to Computer Network

  4. Link Functions • Functions • Construct Frame with Error Detection Code • Encode bit sequence into analog signal • Transmit bit sequence on a physical medium (Modulation) • Receive analog signal • Convert Analog Signal to Bit Sequence • Recover errors through error correction and/or ARQ Signal Adaptor Adaptor Adaptor: convert bits into physical signal and physical signal back into bits Introduction to Computer Network

  5. Link Components NRZI Introduction to Computer Network

  6. Link Properties • Function • Duplex/Half Duplex • One stream, multiple streams • Characteristics • Bit Error Rate • Data Rate (this sometimes mistakenly called bandwidth!) • Degradation with distance Introduction to Computer Network

  7. Example: Optical Links Introduction to Computer Network

  8. Signals Electromagnetic waves propagating in the light speed. • Frequency • Wavelength • A (periodic) signal can be viewed as a sum of sine waves of different frequencies and strengths. • Every signal has an equivalent representation in the frequency domain. » What frequencies are present and what is their strength (energy) Introduction to Computer Network

  9. Signals (cont) Introduction to Computer Network

  10. Modulation • Sender changes the nature of the signal in a way that the receiver can recognize. » Similar to radio: AM or FM • Digital transmission: encodes the values 0 or 1 in the signal. » It is also possible to encode multi-valued symbols • Amplitude modulation: change the strength of the signal, typically between on and off. » Sender and receiver agree on a “rate” » On means 1, Off means 0 • Similar: frequency or phase modulation. • Can also combine method modulation types. Introduction to Computer Network

  11. Amplitude Modulation

  12. Frequency Modulation

  13. Baseband vs. Carrier Modulation • Baseband modulation: send the “bare” signal. • Carrier modulation: use the signal to modulate a higher frequency signal (carrier). • Can be viewed as the product of the two signals • Corresponds to a shift in the frequency domain

  14. Amplitude Carrier Modulation Amplitude Amplitude Signal Carrier Frequency Modulated Carrier

  15. Limits in sending signals • Noise: “random” energy is added to the signal. • Attenuation: some of the energy in the signal leaks away. We need repeaters. • Dispersion: attenuation and propagation speed are frequency dependent. » Changes the shape of the signal Introduction to Computer Network

  16. Noise • A signal s(t) sent over a link is generally • Distorted by the physical nature of the medium • This distortion may be known and reversible at the receiver • Affected by random physical effects • Shot noise • Fading • Multipath Effects • Also interference from other links • Wireless • Crosstalk • Dealing with noise is what communications engineers do Introduction to Computer Network

  17. Link rate and Distance Links become slower with distance because of attenuation of the signal Amplifiers and repeaters can help Introduction to Computer Network

  18. Channel capacity • Every transmission medium supports transmission in a certain frequency range. This is called channel capacity. » The channel bandwidth is determined by the transmission medium and the nature of the transmitter and receivers • A noiseless channel of width H can at most transmit a binary signal at a rate 2 x H. » E.g. a 3000 Hz channel can transmit data at a rate of at most 6000 bits/second Assumes binary amplitude encoding • Shannon extended this result by accounting for the effects of noise. • More aggressive encoding can increase the channel bandwidth. » Example: modems Introduction to Computer Network

  19. Nyquist’s Theorum • How is the data rate constrained by bandwidth? • Maximum data rate(bits/second) = 2 * bandwidth (hz) • Nyquist’s Theorum considers only the limit imposed by the bandwidth not noise, encoding, or other factors.

  20. Nyquist’sTheorumWhy Double The Bandwidth? • In addition to looking at a signal in the time domain, we can view it in the frequency domain. • In other words, instead of asking the question, “What is the amplitude at time X?”, we can ask the question, “How much energy is present every X units of time?” Energy Frequency

  21. Nyquist’s TheorumWhy Double The Bandwidth? • As an analog signal is transmitted through some media, it is filtered by that media. • Not only is noise introduced, but energy at certain frequencies is lost – and nearly completely so above and below some threshold frequencies. • As a result, the signal has no harmonics above a certain frequency or below another.

  22. Nyquist’s TheorumWhy Double The Bandwidth? • A fundamental theoretical finding is that to reproduce an analog signal accurately at a certain frequency, we must sample it twice as frequently. Otherwise, we could lose information. • If we sample less often, we might miss an event – we sample just before it happens. • If we sample more often, we just sample the same thing twice – we can’t get more information than is there – and the data has already been limited to a certain bandwidth of information.

  23. Nyquist’s TheorumWhy Double The Bandwidth? We need to have two points within the same period to know exactly which sine function we have. More points provide no additional information.

  24. Better Than Nyquist’s Limit • If clocks are synchronized sender and receiver, we only need one point per period. • This is because the synchronized starting point counts as one of the two points.

  25. Noisy Channel • Consider ratio of signal power to noise power. • Consider noise to be super-imposed signal • Decibel (dB) = 10 Log (S/N) • S/N of 10 = 10 dB • S/N of 100 = 20 dB • S/N of 1000 = 30 dB

  26. Shannon’s Theorem • Maximum data rate (bits/second) = bandwidth (Hz) Log 2 (1 + S/N) • As before, this only gives us the limit on the data rate imposed by the noise, itself. • It does not consider the encoding or bandwidth limitations. • The bandwidth parameter can be confusing. It is there because it governs the effect that the noise has. More bandwidth either dilutes the noise, or gives the data more places to hide, or both.

  27. Shannon’s Theorum signal noise • Increased bandwidth decreases the effects of noise. • The signal has either more frequency space to call its own, or the noise • gets diluted across the frequency space, or some combination of the two.

  28. Signaling bits on a linkMulti-level Signaling 2-bits per symbol 3-bits per symbol 8 4 7 6 3 5 Levels Levels 4 2 3 2 1 1 00 11 10 01 00 000 010 101 001 110 Ultimately, what limits the number of bits I can send per symbol? Introduction to Computer Network

  29. Maximum Capacity/Data Rate Shannon Capacity: Bandwidth of link Signal-to-Noise ratio • For example: • Bandwidth of telephone link from telephone to a typical home is approx 3300Hz – 300Hz = 3kHz • Signal-to-noise ratio is approx 30dB = 10log10(S/N) • Therefore, C = 3000*log2(1001) ~= 30kb/s Optical fiber has a higher capacity because the bandwidth, B, of a fiber is much greater than for wire; and it is less susceptible to noise, N. Introduction to Computer Network

  30. Sampling Result (Nyquist) • Suppose a signal s(t) has a bandwidth B. • Sampling Result: Suppose we sample it (accurately) every T seconds. • If T≤ 1/2B then it is possible to reconstruct the s(t) correctly • Only one signal with bandwidth B has these sample points • There are multiple signals with these sample points for signals with bandwidth greater than B • Increasing the bandwidth results in a richer signal space • No noise allowed in the sampling result Introduction to Computer Network

  31. Copper Wire • Unshielded Twisted Pair (UTP) » Two copper wires twisted - avoid antenna effect » Grouped into cables: multiple pairs with common sheath » Cat 3 (voice grade) versus Cat 5 for data » 100 Mbps up to 100 m, 1 Mbps up to a few km » Cost: ~ 10cents/foot • Coax cables. » One connector is placed inside the other connector » Holds the signal in place and keeps out noise » Gigabit up to a km Introduction to Computer Network

  32. Copper Wire Introduction to Computer Network

  33. Fiber Optic q Thin thread of glass or plastic q Lightweight. q Fibers act as wave-guides for light which is usually produced by lasers. q Visible light has frequency around 5*10 15 Hz, which ensures an extremely high bandwidth. q The raw materials are cheap. q Immune to electrical interference. q Difficult to join and tap. q Security advantages Introduction to Computer Network

  34. Ray Propagation, Fiber cladding core lower index of refraction (note: minimum bend radius of a few cm)

  35. Fiber Types • Multimode fiber. • 62.5 or 50 micron core carries multiple “modes” • used at 1.3 microns, usually LED source • subject to mode dispersion: different propagation modes travel at different speeds, depending on where source reflects bounces within cable – different paths are different lengths • Mode dispersion can be combated with a graded refraction index. Cable has variable refraction index to squeeze things back together. • typical limit: 1 Gbps at 100m • Single mode • Narrow cable so that it holds only “one beam” of light • 8 micron core carries a single mode • used at 1.3 or 1.55 microns, usually laser diode source • typical limit: 1 Gbps at 10 km or more • still subject to chromatic dispersion

  36. Leased Lines • Dedicated link from Telephone Companies • DS1 24 digital voice of 64Kbps • DS3 28 DS1 • STS stands for Synch. Transfer signal Introduction to Computer Network

  37. Last-Mile Links • Connect from home to network service providers • xDSl (Digital Subscriber line), runs on local loop on telephone line. ADSL, VDSL • CATV- Cabel TV, BW of 6 MHZ, is asymmetric. Introduction to Computer Network

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