1 / 30

CS 453 Computer Networks

CS 453 Computer Networks. Lecture 4 Layer 1 – Physical Layer. Data Communications Growth. A little more that 25 years ago The IBM PC had a clock speed of less than 5 MHz Networking technology (specifically ARPANET) ran at 56Kbps Today PC clock speeds run up to 4 GHz

Télécharger la présentation

CS 453 Computer Networks

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. CS 453Computer Networks Lecture 4 Layer 1 – Physical Layer

  2. Data Communications Growth • A little more that 25 years ago • The IBM PC had a clock speed of less than 5 MHz • Networking technology (specifically ARPANET) ran at 56Kbps • Today • PC clock speeds run up to 4 GHz • High speed networks run at a max of 10 Gbps • In comparison in about 25 years • CPU clock speed improved by a factor of 800 • Communications speeds improved by a factor of 178,000

  3. Data Communications Growth • During the same time • Communications error rates dropped from about 1 error per 10,000 bits • To near zero • Due to a large extent to Fiber Optics

  4. A Brief History • The idea of guiding light has been around for a while • Tyndall’s Water Fountain • Early 20th century – glass tubes for projecting images from hard to reach places • Medical images, equipment

  5. A brief History • 1950s Kapany did early work that lead to optical fibers • Fiberscope – use of fibers for internal medical examinations • There was a strong interest in using fiber optics for communications • Light attenuation to great

  6. A Brief History • Many believed that light attenuation was due to principles of physics • 1960s Kao and Hockham theorized that attenuation was due to impurities in the glass • Kao and Hockham suggested that optical fiber could be used for telecommunications if … • Attenuation could be made less than 20 dB/km

  7. A Brief History • 1970 Researchers at Corning Glass Works developed an optical fiber … • With 17 dB/km light attenuation • A few years later they developed fiber with 4 dB/km attenuation

  8. A Brief History • For more on the history of fiber optics • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiber_optics#History • http://www.sff.net/people/Jeff.Hecht/history.html • http://www.fiber-optics.info/fiber-history.htm

  9. Fiber Optics • A waveguide for propagating light along its length

  10. Fiber Optics • Fiber Optics as a data communication medium is based on a principle of physics • The principle of refraction • When light passes the boundary from one medium to another – • It is refracted --- i.e. it bends • Recall looking at a coin in the bottom of a clear pool of water • Most noticeable with prisms, magnifying lens, etc.

  11. Fiber Optics • Light passing a boundary between, for example, glass and air at an angle A will be refracted (bent) to angle B. • Beyond a certain angle all of the light will be refracted back into the original media (glass) • That “certain angle” is dependent on characteristics of the media on both sides of the boundary – • Refraction Index

  12. Fiber Optics • Refraction of light at the Glass (silica)/Air boundary From Tanenbaum (2003) pg. 94

  13. Fiber Optics From Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiber_optics)

  14. Fiber Optics • Incredibly high bandwidth • Data rates (theoretical) greater that 50,000 Gbps • Very low light attenuation

  15. Fiber Optics • Long distances without attenuation • 1 Gbps data rates common • 10 Gbps available and economically feasible – major trunks • 40 Gbps – currently possible • Fiber optics can achieve much higher data rates • Limited by transceiver electronics

  16. Fiber Optics • Fiber Optic cable includes • A core – made of glass – about 50 microns in diameter for multimode or 10 microns for single mode • Cladding – usually also glass but with a lower refraction index • This keeps the light trapped in the cable • A sheath – plastic outer jacket of the fiber cable • Often “packaged” in multi-fiber cables… • But always in pairs

  17. Fiber Optics • Multimode Fiber • Multiple wavelengths of light • Thicker core (50 microns) • Cheaper • Single Mode • Small diameter core • Propagates light in a straight line • Longer distances • More expensive fiber, end equipment

  18. Fiber Optics • Interconnecting Fiber • Termination in connectors • Plug into “patch panels” • Connectors up to 20% light attenuation • Mechanical Splice • Cut fibers, polish ends and connect in sleeves • Requires skill – with skill about 5 minutes per splice • Fusion – welding • Expensive equipment • Very little attenuation

  19. Fiber Optic Network • A fiber optic link must have – • The medium – fiber • A light emitter • LED • Semiconductor laser • A receiver • Fiber is unidirectional • Must use in pairs • Fiber Interface • Convert light to electrical signal and electrical signal to light

  20. Fiber Optic Networks • Fiber connector information • http://www.fiber-optics.info/articles/connector-care.htm

  21. Fiber Optics • Fiber Networks • Popular for long distance links • Used in LANs and high performance applications • Fiber connections must be point to point • Cannot use broadcast technology • Like Bus topology • So, how do we connect many computers with a fiber network

  22. Fiber Optic Network • Long Distance Link • Router to Router • Routers hand off to individual computers • …or to computers on LAN • LANs • Pass Taps • Active Repeater • Takes incoming light converts to electrical signal… • Converts electrical signal to light and sends

  23. Fiber Optic Networks • Remember that we could squeeze all of the bandwidth out of fiber optics • So, how do we get more of the bandwidth • Wave Division Multiplexing (WDM) • Remember that emitter diodes can be tunable – to different wavelengths of light • Suppose – • You take multiple input channels • Tune each to a different wavelength of light on its own fiber () • Then combine them on one fiber….

  24. Fiber Optic Networks • …each  is split out to a different fiber at the receiving end • From Tanenbaum (2003) pg. 139

  25. Fiber Optic Networks • …that’s Wave Division Multiplexing (WDM) • …its Layer 1 – protocol independent • So, how much • 96 10Gbps channels on a fiber pair

  26. Fiber Optics Networks • DWDM – Dense Wave Division Multiplexing • Very small channel separation • Large number of channels • See • http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/mels/dwdm/dwdm_fns.htm

  27. Fiber Optic Networks • Optical Carrier Levels - OC • Used on SONET Networks • Units of measure measurement for data rates on fiber optic links • One OC roughly corresponds to 52 Mbps • More on this later

  28. Fiber vs. Copper • Fiber has much higher bandwidth • Very low signal attenuation relative to copper • Repeaters needed after long distance – • 50 km for fiber vs. 5 km for copper* • Light weight • One km of 1000 pair copper twisted pair = more than 17,000 lbs. • One km of 1 fiber pair = about 220 lbs. • 1 fiber pair can carry more data than 1000 copper twisted pair cables From Tanenbaum (2003)

  29. Fiber vs. Copper • Security • Copper leaks • Fiber does not leak • Fiber deployment requires more advanced skill • Fiber sensitive to damage

More Related