1 / 18

Transmission Media

Transmission Media Keng Siau University of Nebraska-Lincoln Transmission: The Basic Encode data as energy and transmit energy Decode energy at destination back into data Energy can be electrical, light, radio, sound

issac
Télécharger la présentation

Transmission Media

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Transmission Media Keng Siau University of Nebraska-Lincoln

  2. Transmission: The Basic • Encode data as energy and transmit energy • Decode energy at destination back into data • Energy can be electrical, light, radio, sound • Each form of energy has different properties and requirements for transmission

  3. Transmission Media • Transmitted energy is carried through some sort of medium • Transmitter encodes data as energy and transmits energy through medium • Requires special hardware for data encoding • Media can be copper, glass, air, ...

  4. Copper Wires • Twisted pair uses two wires • Coaxial cable includes shield for improved performance

  5. Glass Fibers • Thin glass fiber carries light with encoded data • Plastic jacket allows fiber to bend (some!) without breaking • Fiber is very clear and designed to reflect light internally for efficient transmission

  6. Glass Fibers • Light emitting diode (LED) or laser injects light into fiber • Light sensitive receiver at other end translates light back into data

  7. Radio • Data transmitted using radio waves • Energy travels through the air rather than copper or glass • Conceptually similar to radio, TV, cellular phones

  8. Radio • Can travel through walls and through an entire building • Can be long distance or short distance • Long distance • satellite relay • Short distance • wireless computer network

  9. Satellites • A communication satellite in orbit around the earth can provide a network connection across an ocean

  10. Satellites • A single satellite usually contains multiple transponders (typically 6-12) • Each transponder consists of a radio receiver and transmitter • Each transponder uses a different radio frequency (I.e., channel) • multiple communications can proceed simultaneously and independently

  11. Geosynchronous Satellites • Place in an orbit that is exactly synchronized with the rotation of the earth • Geostationary Earth Orbit (GEO) • Distance required for geosynchronous orbit is 36,000 km or 20,000 miles • known as high earth orbit • The entire 360-degree circle above the equator can only hold 45-90 satellites • because satellites need to be separated to avoid interference

  12. Low Earth Orbit Satellites • Orbit a few hundred miles above the earth (200-400 miles) • Period of rotation is faster than the rotation of the earth • Disadvantages • can only be used during the time its orbit passes between two ground stations • continuously moving the ground stations so they point directly at the satellites

  13. Low Earth Orbit Satellite Arrays • A set of satellites in low earth orbits • Allow continuous communications through satellites in low earth orbit • at least one satellite is available at any time • around 66 satellites are required to provide service over the entire surface of the earth

  14. Microwave • High frequency radio waves • Unidirectional, for point-to-point communication • Antennas mounted on towers relay transmitted data

  15. Infrared • Infrared light transmits data through the air • similar to technology used in TV remote control • Can propagate throughout a room (bouncing off surfaces) • but will not penetrate walls • Becoming common in personal digital assistants (PDAs) and portable computers

  16. Laser • Unidirectional, like microwave • Higher speed than microwave • Uses laser transmitter and photo-sensitive receiver at each end • Point-to-point, typically between buildings

  17. Choosing a Medium • Copper wire • mature technology • rugged and inexpensive; • maximum transmission speed is limited • Glass fiber • higher speed • spans longer distances • requires only single fiber • more expensive; less rugged

  18. Choosing a Medium • Radio and microwave don't require physical connection • Radio and infrared can be used for mobile connections • Laser also does not need physical connection and supports • higher speeds

More Related