Data Communications: Conversion, Modulation and Multiplexing Chapter 5 The Management of Telecommunications, 2 nd edition Houston H. Carr and Charles A.

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Presentation transcript:

Data Communications: Conversion, Modulation and Multiplexing Chapter 5 The Management of Telecommunications, 2 nd edition Houston H. Carr and Charles A. Snyder

2 Chapter 5 Introduction Until the early 1990s, voice and fax were served by one network, data by another, television by another. By moving all of these to a digital mode, there is the potential to serve them all with a single transport capability: a single network.

3 Chapter 5 Analog voice The public switched telephone network is an analog network developed to handle voice traffic. Amplifiers are placed every mile or so to compensate for loss of signal strength due to attenuation. Boosting analog signals through repeaters amplifies all parts of the signal, including noise.

4 Chapter 5 Digital voice A method of avoiding problems caused by amplifying an analog signal is to convert the analog voice signal to a digital form for transmission. Digital signals also attenuate over distance, however digital signals are regenerated and amplified instead of just being amplified when required, leaving the noise behind.

5 Chapter 5 Digital voice Transmitting voice as data communications instead of an analog signals provides a cleaner signal at the destination. Digital voice can be handled the same way as data, with the exception that reception delays are less tolerated for voice than data.

6 Chapter 5 Converting an analog signal to a digital form To convert an analog signal to a digital form, equipment must  Sample the analog signal many times a second,  Convert the measured analog value to a digital (integer) value

7 Chapter 5 Digital Signal Regeneration

8 Chapter 5 Sine wave A sine wave represents a simple analog signal, much like a voice conversation.

9 Chapter 5 Converting an Analog Signal to Digital A device samples the signal strength at each signal, a through n, and measures the values of 1 through 5 volts (analog)

10 Chapter 5 Converting analog signals to digital The analog values are represented as binary numbers and transmitted over a network as digital data. DecimalBinary

11 Chapter 5 Converting analog signals to digital The equipment at the receiving end of the digital circuit converts the binary numbers back to analog signals, voltage levels, using the same timing as the original sampling device.

12 Chapter 5 Converting analog signals to digital The fidelity of reproducing the analog signal is dependent on the sample rate and the number of integer sample points. A rate of 8,000 times per second is required for a good representation of telephone conversation. This is based on Bell Labs research; the sampling rate is two times the highest frequency. The system requires 256 integer values of measurement.

13 Chapter 5 Converting analog signals to digital The system requires 256 integer values of measurement, which can be represented with 8 digital bits (2 8 = 256). This combination necessitates a digital signal of 8 bits, 8,000 times per second, or digital speed of 64,000 bps. The standard that employs these is called pulse code modulation (PCM). A circuit or channel with a bandwidth of 64 Kbps is referred to as a DS-0 circuit or channel.

14 Chapter 5 Pulse code modulation Pulse Code Modulation (PCM)  samples the level of a voice conversation 8,000 times per second using a scale of 256 integer points,  converts each integer measurement into an 8- bit code, and  Transmits the resultant information at a speed of 64,000 bps. The receiving unit reverses the process.

15 Chapter 5 Adaptive Differential Pulse Code Modulation Adaptive Differential Pulse Code Modulation (ADPCM) technology measures the signal like PCM, but  transmits the difference between successive measured values instead of the value itself.  Allows the use of a 4-bit code to represent the difference value and reduces the signal requirement to 32,000 bps.  The system uses 3 bits to represent 8 integer values and 1 bit to note whether the change was positive or negative.

16 Chapter 5 PCM and ADPCM Off-the-shelf components can provide PCM (64 Kbps), ADPCM (32 Kbps), and 16 Kbps Digital-to-Analog and Analog-to- Digital conversion without loss of sound quality

17 Chapter 5 Channels Channels are logical paths for communicating data It is not necessarily a pair of wires. A channel connects the source to the receiver or destination Thought of as a one-way communications path. Transmission is usually electrical, but can also be photonic

18 Chapter 5 Circuits A circuit is a means of connecting two points for communication Circuits are physical connections and can be divided into channels A two-way communications path.

19 Chapter 5 Path A path is a route between any two nodes. A network consists of a pattern of paths and associated equipment that establishes connections between nodes. A network is also defined as two or more nodes, connected by one or more channels.

20 Chapter 5 Modulation Modulation places payload signals onto carrier signals.

21 Chapter 5 Amplitude Modulation (AM Radio) Amplitude Modulation is used in AM Radio Music can be superimposed, or modulated, onto the carrier wave by varying the amplitude of the carrier wave in correlation to the music signal.

22 Chapter 5 Frequency modulation (FM radio) Frequency modulation is used in FM radio and television. The analog music signal varies the frequency of the carrier wave.

23 Chapter 5 Television signals Television uses both amplitude and frequency modulation to transmit the picture and sound to a television receiver. Each channel has a 6 MHz bandwidth, superimposed onto a carrier wave range of MHz for very high frequency (VHF) channels 2-13, and MHz for ultrahigh frequency (UHF) channels The video signal uses amplitude modulation in the range of 0.5 to near 5.75 MHz, with color information being coded at 3.6 MHz using other AM techniques.

24 Chapter 5 Signal transmission Neither analog nor digital signals can be transmitted directly because of the noise in the environment, or as in the case of radio and television, the distance required. We modulate the desired signals, such as voice and video, onto a carrier frequency, which can be transmitted further.

25 Chapter 5 Broadband verses Baseband Broadband generally refers to wide analog circuits, often divided into channels via Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM). Baseband means a single channel, usually with digital data.

26 Chapter 5 Compression Compression increases the bandwidth of a channel without adding or replacing circuits or channels. Compression is used to reduce the amount of storage required and the amount of bandwidth required in transport by encoding series of occurrences of such things such as blank spaces in a document. This encoding reduces the redundancies transmitted.

27 Chapter 5 Effective bandwidth Effective bandwidth is equal to the channel’s native bandwidth, minus the effects of noise, plus that gained due to compression.

Multplexing

29 Chapter 5 Frequency division multiplexing Frequency division multiplexing (FDM) places several signals onto one channel or circuit by placing each at a different part of the (analog) frequency spectrum.

30 Chapter 5 Four simultaneous transmissions on a single circuit

31 Chapter 5 Divided Channels When a channel is established but not totally utilized, the potential exists to further divide the channel for additional uses. Subsidiary communications authorization (SCA) uses subchannel transmission over the FM radio spectrum.  Subchannel is a division of a channel, which may be a division of a circuit.

32 Chapter 5 Time division multiplexing Time division multiplexing (TDM) shares the circuit’s time allocation. Simplistically, TDM physically switches from originator to originator to share the time available, and the receiving unit does the same in synchronism.

33 Chapter 5 Time division multiplexing An alternative method of TDM is for the controller to poll the slaves to see if each wishes to be connected. Polling provides more control and requires more overhead, but as with statistical methods, active devices have more access time.

34 Chapter 5 Statistical Time Division Multiplexing A special form of TDM. Most common use has been the terminal-host configuration, where the terminals attached to the CPU are not always transmitting.

35 Chapter 5 Statistical Time Division multiplexing STDM shares a single line among multiple sources on a non-uniform basis. The technology is cost effective in an environment where multiple computers must communicate directly with other computers, where the time required varies by computer and time, and only a single communications channel is available (non- LAN environment).

Integrated Services Digital Network

37 Chapter 5 Integrated Services Digital Network ISDN is a digital replacement of the analog POTS telephone. ISDN is being used extensively in Western Europe and Japan by business.

38 Chapter 5 ISDN (PRI) – 23 B channels Twenty-three 64Kbps channels 1,472 Mbps total bandwidth + 8 Kbps for overhead = Mbps = T1 Tariffs range (1996) from $300 to $2,000 per month. (More than 11 times BRI bandwidth.)

39 Chapter 5 ISDN (BRI) - Two B channels Two 64 Kbps (DS-0) bearer channels per BRI line  Bearer channels may be added for 128 Kbps total bandwidth One 16 Kbps data or delta channel for control and data 16 Kbps overhead Total bandwidth = 160 Kbps; usable bandwidth = 144 Kbps Service tariffs can average (1996) from $30 to $100 per circuit.

40 Chapter 5 T1 Leased line - 24 channels Twenty-four 64 Kbps channels Mbps total bandwidth Service prices (1996) range from $600 to $750 per month with some drops as low as $300 per month.

41 Chapter 5 POTS verses ISDN Telephone CharacteristicsPOTSISDN Local LoopTwisted-pair, copper Channels13 Bandwidth2,700 Hz analog160 Kbps digital Noise levelMediumLow and controllable SignalingTouch-Tone ® Data channel

End of Chapter 5 The Management of Telecommunications: Houston H. Carr and Charles A. Snyder