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Chapter2FundamentalsofDataandSignals.ppt

Chapter Two

Fundamentals of Data and Signals

Data Communications and Computer Networks: A Business User's Approach

Eighth Edition

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After reading this chapter,
you should be able to:

  • Distinguish between data and signals, and cite the advantages of digital data and signals over analog data and signals
  • Identify the three basic components of a signal
  • Discuss the bandwidth of a signal and how it relates to data transfer speed
  • Identify signal strength and attenuation, and how they are related

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After reading this chapter,
you should be able to (continued):

  • Outline the basic characteristics of transmitting analog data with analog signals, digital data with digital signals, digital data with analog signals, and analog data with digital signals
  • List and draw diagrams of the basic digital encoding techniques, and explain the advantages and disadvantages of each
  • Identify the different shift keying (modulation) techniques, and describe their advantages, disadvantages, and uses

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After reading this chapter,
you should be able to (continued):

  • Identify the two most common digitization techniques, and describe their advantages and disadvantages
  • Identify the different data codes and how they are used in communication systems

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Introduction

  • Data are entities that convey meaning (computer files, music on CD, results from a blood gas analysis machine)
  • Signals are the electric or electromagnetic encoding of data (telephone conversation, web page download)
  • Computer networks and data/voice communication systems transmit signals
  • Data and signals can be analog or digital

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Introduction (continued)

Table 2-1 Four combinations of data and signals

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Data and Signals

  • Data are entities that convey meaning within a computer or computer system
  • Signals are the electric or electromagnetic impulses used to encode and transmit data

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Analog vs. Digital

  • Data and signals can be either analog or digital
  • Analog is a continuous waveform, with examples such as (naturally occurring) music and voice
  • It is harder to separate noise from an analog signal than it is to separate noise from a digital signal (see the following two slides)

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Analog vs. Digital (continued)

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Analog vs. Digital (continued)

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Analog vs. Digital (continued)

  • Digital is a discrete or non-continuous waveform
  • Something about the signal makes it obvious that the signal can only appear in a fixed number of forms (see next slide)
  • Noise in digital signal
  • You can still discern a high voltage from a low voltage
  • Too much noise – you cannot discern a high voltage from a low voltage

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Analog vs. Digital (continued)

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Analog vs. Digital (continued)

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Analog vs. Digital (continued)

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Fundamentals of Signals

  • All signals have three components:
  • Amplitude
  • Frequency
  • Phase

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Fundamentals of Signals – Amplitude

  • Amplitude
  • The height of the wave above or below a given reference point
  • Amplitude is usually measured in volts

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Fundamentals of Signals – Amplitude

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Fundamentals of Signals – Frequency

  • Frequency
  • The number of times a signal makes a complete cycle within a given time frame; frequency is measured in Hertz (Hz), or cycles per second (period = 1 / frequency)
  • Spectrum – Range of frequencies that a signal spans from minimum to maximum
  • Bandwidth – Absolute value of the difference between the lowest and highest frequencies of a signal
  • For example, consider an average voice
  • The average voice has a frequency range of roughly 300 Hz to 3100 Hz
  • The spectrum would be 300 – 3100 Hz
  • The bandwidth would be 2800 Hz

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Fundamentals of Signals – Frequency

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Fundamentals of Signals – Phase

  • Phase
  • The position of the waveform relative to a given moment of time or relative to time zero
  • A change in phase can be any number of angles between 0 and 360 degrees
  • Phase changes often occur on common angles, such as 45, 90, 135, etc.

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Fundamentals of Signals – Phase

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Fundamentals of Signals

  • Phase
  • If a signal can experience two different phase angles, then 1 bit can be transmitted with each signal change (each baud)
  • If a signal can experience four different phase angles, then 2 bits can be transmitted with each signal change (each baud)
  • Note: number of bits transmitted with each signal change = log2 (number of different phase angles)
  • (You can replace “phase angles” with “amplitude levels” or “frequency levels”)

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Loss of Signal Strength

  • All signals experience loss (attenuation)
  • Attenuation is denoted as a decibel (dB) loss
  • Decibel losses (and gains) are additive

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Loss of Signal Strength (continued)

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Loss of Signal Strength

Formula for decibel (dB):

dB = 10 x log10 (P2 / P1)

where P1 is the beginning power level and P2 is the ending power level

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Loss of Signal Strength (continued)

  • So if a signal loses 3 dB, is that a lot?
  • What if a signal starts at 100 watts and ends at 50 watts? What is dB loss?

dB = 10 x log10 (P2 / P1)

dB = 10 x log10 (50 / 100)

dB = 10 x log10 (0.5)

dB = 10 x -0.3

dB = -3.0

  • So a 3.0 decibel loss losses half of its power

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Converting Data into Signals

  • There are four main combinations of data and signals:
  • Analog data transmitted using analog signals
  • Digital data transmitted using digital signals
  • Digital data transmitted using discrete analog signals
  • Analog data transmitted using digital signals
  • Let’s look at each these

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1. Transmitting Analog Data with
Analog Signals

  • In order to transmit analog data, you can modulate the data onto a set of analog signals
  • Broadcast radio and the older broadcast television are two very common examples of this
  • We modulate the data onto another set of frequencies so that all the different channels can coexist at different frequencies

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1. Transmitting Analog Data with
Analog Signals (continued)

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2. Transmitting Digital Data with Digital Signals: Digital Encoding Schemes

  • There are numerous techniques available to convert digital data into digital signals. Let’s examine five:
  • NRZ-L
  • NRZI
  • Manchester
  • Differential Manchester
  • Bipolar AMI
  • These are used in LANs and some telephone systems

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2. Transmitting Digital Data with Digital Signals: Digital Encoding Schemes (continued)

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Nonreturn to Zero Digital Encoding Schemes

  • Nonreturn to zero-level (NRZ-L) transmits 1s as zero voltages and 0s as positive voltages
  • Nonreturn to zero inverted (NRZI) has a voltage change at the beginning of a 1 and no voltage change at the beginning of a 0
  • Fundamental difference exists between NRZ-L and NRZI
  • With NRZ-L, the receiver has to check the voltage level for each bit to determine whether the bit is a 0 or a 1,
  • With NRZI, the receiver has to check whether there is a change at the beginning of the bit to determine if it is a 0 or a 1

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Manchester Digital Encoding Schemes

  • Note how with a Differential Manchester code, every bit has at least one significant change. Some bits have two signal changes per bit (baud rate = twice bps)

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Manchester Digital Encoding Schemes (continued)

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Bipolar-AMI Encoding Scheme

  • The bipolar-AMI encoding scheme is unique among all the encoding schemes because it uses three voltage levels
  • When a device transmits a binary 0, a zero voltage is transmitted
  • When the device transmits a binary 1, either a positive voltage or a negative voltage is transmitted
  • Which of these is transmitted depends on the binary 1 value that was last transmitted

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4B/5B Digital Encoding Scheme

  • Yet another encoding technique; this one converts four bits of data into five-bit quantities
  • The five-bit quantities are unique in that no five-bit code has more than 2 consecutive zeroes
  • The five-bit code is then transmitted using an NRZI encoded signal

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4B/5B Digital Encoding Scheme (continued)

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3. Transmitting Digital Data with
Discrete Analog Signals

  • Three basic techniques:
  • Amplitude shift keying
  • Frequency shift keying
  • Phase shift keying
  • One can then combine two or more of these basic techniques to form more complex modulation techniques (such as quadrature amplitude modulation)

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Amplitude Shift Keying

  • One amplitude encodes a 0 while another amplitude encodes a 1 (a form of amplitude modulation)

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Amplitude Shift Keying (continued)

Note: here we have four different amplitudes, so we can encode 2 bits

in each signal change (bits per signal change = log2 (amplitude levels)).

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Frequency Shift Keying

  • One frequency encodes a 0 while another frequency encodes a 1 (a form of frequency modulation)

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Phase Shift Keying

  • One phase change encodes a 0 while another phase change encodes a 1 (a form of phase modulation)

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Phase Shift Keying (continued)

  • Quadrature Phase Shift Keying
  • Four different phase angles used
  • 45 degrees
  • 135 degrees
  • 225 degrees
  • 315 degrees

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Phase Shift Keying (continued)

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Phase Shift Keying (continued)

  • Quadrature amplitude modulation
  • As an example of QAM, 12 different phases are combined with two different amplitudes
  • Since only 4 phase angles have 2 different amplitudes, there are a total of 16 combinations
  • With 16 signal combinations, each baud equals 4 bits of information (log2(16) = 4, or inversely, 2 ^ 4 = 16)

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Phase Shift Keying (continued)

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4. Transmitting Analog Data with
Digital Signals

  • To convert analog data into a digital signal, there are two techniques:
  • Pulse code modulation (the more common)
  • Delta modulation

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Pulse Code Modulation

  • The analog waveform is sampled at specific intervals and the “snapshots” are converted to binary values

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Pulse Code Modulation (continued)

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Pulse Code Modulation (continued)

  • When the binary values are later converted to an analog signal, a waveform similar to the original results

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Pulse Code Modulation (continued)

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Pulse Code Modulation (continued)

  • The more snapshots taken in the same amount of time, or the more quantization levels, the better the resolution

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Pulse Code Modulation (continued)

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Pulse Code Modulation (continued)

  • Since telephone systems digitize human voice, and since the human voice has a fairly narrow bandwidth, telephone systems can digitize voice into either 128 or 256 levels
  • These are called quantization levels
  • If 128 levels, then each sample is 7 bits (2 ^ 7 = 128)
  • If 256 levels, then each sample is 8 bits (2 ^ 8 = 256)

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Pulse Code Modulation (continued)

  • How fast do you have to sample an input source to get a fairly accurate representation?
  • Nyquist says 2 times the highest frequency
  • Thus, if you want to digitize voice (4000 Hz), you need to sample at 8000 samples per second

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Delta Modulation

  • An analog waveform is tracked, using a binary 1 to represent a rise in voltage, and a 0 to represent a drop

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Delta Modulation (continued)

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The Relationship Between Frequency and Bits Per Second

  • Higher Data Transfer Rates
  • How do you send data faster?
  • Use a higher frequency signal (make sure the medium can handle the higher frequency
  • Use a higher number of signal levels
  • In both cases, noise can be a problem

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The Relationship Between Frequency and Bits Per Second (continued)

  • Maximum Data Transfer Rates
  • How do you calculate a maximum data rate?
  • Use Shannon’s equation
  • S(f) = f x log2 (1 + S/N)
  • Where f = signal frequency (bandwidth), S is the signal power in watts, and N is the noise power in watts
  • For example, what is the data rate of a 3400 Hz signal with 0.2 watts of power and 0.0002 watts of noise?
  • S(f) = 3400 x log2 (1 + 0.2/0.0002)
    = 3400 x log2 (1001)
    = 3400 x 9.97
    = 33898 bps

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Data Codes

  • The set of all textual characters or symbols and their corresponding binary patterns is called a data code
  • There are three common data code sets:
  • EBCDIC
  • ASCII
  • Unicode

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EBCDIC

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ASCII

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Unicode

  • Each character is 16 bits
  • A large number of languages / character sets
  • For example:
  • T equals 0000 0000 0101 0100
  • r equals 0000 0000 0111 0010
  • a equals 0000 0000 0110 0001

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Data and Signal Conversions In Action:
Two Examples

  • Let us transmit the message “Sam, what time is the meeting with accounting? Hannah.”
  • This message leaves Hannah’s workstation and travels across a local area network

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Data and Signal Conversions In Action:
Two Examples (continued)

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Data and Signal Conversions In Action:
Two Examples (continued)

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Data and Signal Conversions In Action:
Two Examples (continued)

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Summary

  • Data and signals are two basic building blocks of computer networks
  • All data transmitted is either digital or analog
  • Data is transmitted with a signal that can be either digital or analog
  • All signals consist of three basic components: amplitude, frequency, and phase
  • Two important factors affecting the transfer of a signal over a medium are noise and attenuation
  • Four basic combinations of data and signals are possible: analog data converted to an analog signal, digital data converted to a digital signal, digital data converted to a discrete analog signal, and analog data converted to a digital signal

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Summary (continued)

  • To transmit analog data over an analog signal, the analog waveform of the data is combined with another analog waveform in a process known as modulation
  • Digital data carried by digital signals is represented by digital encoding formats
  • For digital data to be transmitted using analog signals, digital data must first undergo a process called shift keying or modulation
  • Three basic techniques of shift keying are amplitude shift keying, frequency shift keying, and phase shift keying

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Summary (continued)

  • Two common techniques for converting analog data so that it may be carried over digital signals are pulse code modulation and delta modulation
  • Data codes are necessary to transmit the letters, numbers, symbols, and control characters found in text data
  • Three important data codes are ASCII, EBCDIC, and Unicode

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