Data Communications and Networking Chapter 3 PDF
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This chapter from the book "Data Communications and Networking" details analog and digital signals and their characteristics. It explains how data is transformed into electromagnetic signals for transmission. The chapter also discusses periodic and nonperiodic signals, and illustrates the difference between them.
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Chapter 3 Data and Signals 3.1 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Note To be transmitted, data must be transformed to electromagnetic signals. 3.2 3-1 ANALOG AND DIGITAL Data can be analog or dig...
Chapter 3 Data and Signals 3.1 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Note To be transmitted, data must be transformed to electromagnetic signals. 3.2 3-1 ANALOG AND DIGITAL Data can be analog or digital. The term analog data refers to information that is continuous; digital data refers to information that has discrete states. Analog data take on continuous values. Digital data take on discrete values. Topics discussed in this section: Analog and Digital Data Analog and Digital Signals Periodic and Nonperiodic Signals 3.3 Note Data can be analog or digital. Analog data are continuous and take continuous values. Digital data have discrete states and take discrete values. 3.4 Note Signals can be analog or digital. Analog signals can have an infinite number of values in a range; digital signals can have only a limited number of values. 3.5 Figure 3.1 Comparison of analog and digital signals 3.6 Note In data communications, we commonly use periodic analog signals and nonperiodic digital signals. 3.7 3-2 PERIODIC ANALOG SIGNALS Periodic analog signals can be classified as simple or composite. A simple periodic analog signal, a sine wave, cannot be decomposed into simpler signals. A composite periodic analog signal is composed of multiple sine waves. Topics discussed in this section: Sine Wave Wavelength Time and Frequency Domain Composite Signals Bandwidth 3.8 Figure 3.2 A sine wave 3.9 Note We discuss a mathematical approach to sine waves in Appendix C. 3.10 Example 3.1 The power in your house can be represented by a sine wave with a peak amplitude of 155 to 170 V. However, it is common knowledge that the voltage of the power in U.S. homes is 110 to 120 V. This discrepancy is due to the fact that these are root mean square (rms) values. The signal is squared and then the average amplitude is calculated. The peak value is equal to 2½ × rms value. 3.11 Figure 3.3 Two signals with the same phase and frequency, but different amplitudes 3.12 Example 3.2 The voltage of a battery is a constant; this constant value can be considered a sine wave, as we will see later. For example, the peak value of an AA battery is normally 1.5 V. 3.13 Note Frequency and period are the inverse of each other. 3.14 Figure 3.4 Two signals with the same amplitude and phase, but different frequencies 3.15 Table 3.1 Units of period and frequency 3.16 Example 3.3 The power we use at home has a frequency of 60 Hz. The period of this sine wave can be determined as follows: 3.17 Example 3.4 Express a period of 100 ms in microseconds. Solution From Table 3.1 we find the equivalents of 1 ms (1 ms is 10−3 s) and 1 s (1 s is 106 μs). We make the following substitutions:. 3.18 Example 3.5 The period of a signal is 100 ms. What is its frequency in kilohertz? Solution First we change 100 ms to seconds, and then we calculate the frequency from the period (1 Hz = 10−3 kHz). 3.19 Note Frequency is the rate of change with respect to time. Change in a short span of time means high frequency. Change over a long span of time means low frequency. 3.20 Note If a signal does not change at all, its frequency is zero. If a signal changes instantaneously, its frequency is infinite. 3.21 Note Phase describes the position of the waveform relative to time 0. 3.22 Figure 3.5 Three sine waves with the same amplitude and frequency, but different phases 3.23 Example 3.6 A sine wave is offset 1/6 cycle with respect to time 0. What is its phase in degrees and radians? Solution We know that 1 complete cycle is 360°. Therefore, 1/6 cycle is 3.24 Figure 3.6 Wavelength and period 3.25 Figure 3.7 The time-domain and frequency-domain plots of a sine wave 3.26 Note A complete sine wave in the time domain can be represented by one single spike in the frequency domain. 3.27 Example 3.7 The frequency domain is more compact and useful when we are dealing with more than one sine wave. For example, Figure 3.8 shows three sine waves, each with different amplitude and frequency. All can be represented by three spikes in the frequency domain. 3.28 Figure 3.8 The time domain and frequency domain of three sine waves 3.29 Note A single-frequency sine wave is not useful in data communications; we need to send a composite signal, a signal made of many simple sine waves. 3.30 Note According to Fourier analysis, any composite signal is a combination of simple sine waves with different frequencies, amplitudes, and phases. Fourier analysis is discussed in Appendix C. 3.31 Note If the composite signal is periodic, the decomposition gives a series of signals with discrete frequencies; if the composite signal is nonperiodic, the decomposition gives a combination of sine waves with continuous frequencies. 3.32 Example 3.8 Figure 3.9 shows a periodic composite signal with frequency f. This type of signal is not typical of those found in data communications. We can consider it to be three alarm systems, each with a different frequency. The analysis of this signal can give us a good understanding of how to decompose signals. 3.33 Figure 3.9 A composite periodic signal 3.34 Figure 3.10 Decomposition of a composite periodic signal in the time and frequency domains 3.35 Example 3.9 Figure 3.11 shows a nonperiodic composite signal. It can be the signal created by a microphone or a telephone set when a word or two is pronounced. In this case, the composite signal cannot be periodic, because that implies that we are repeating the same word or words with exactly the same tone. 3.36 Figure 3.11 The time and frequency domains of a nonperiodic signal 3.37 Note The bandwidth of a composite signal is the difference between the highest and the lowest frequencies contained in that signal. 3.38 Figure 3.12 The bandwidth of periodic and nonperiodic composite signals 3.39 Example 3.10 If a periodic signal is decomposed into five sine waves with frequencies of 100, 300, 500, 700, and 900 Hz, what is its bandwidth? Draw the spectrum, assuming all components have a maximum amplitude of 10 V. Solution Let fh be the highest frequency, fl the lowest frequency, and B the bandwidth. Then The spectrum has only five spikes, at 100, 300, 500, 700, and 900 Hz (see Figure 3.13). 3.40 Figure 3.13 The bandwidth for Example 3.10 3.41 Example 3.11 A periodic signal has a bandwidth of 20 Hz. The highest frequency is 60 Hz. What is the lowest frequency? Draw the spectrum if the signal contains all frequencies of the same amplitude. Solution Let fh be the highest frequency, fl the lowest frequency, and B the bandwidth. Then The spectrum contains all integer frequencies. We show this by a series of spikes (see Figure 3.14). 3.42 Figure 3.14 The bandwidth for Example 3.11 3.43 Example 3.12 A nonperiodic composite signal has a bandwidth of 200 kHz, with a middle frequency of 140 kHz and peak amplitude of 20 V. The two extreme frequencies have an amplitude of 0. Draw the frequency domain of the signal. Solution The lowest frequency must be at 40 kHz and the highest at 240 kHz. Figure 3.15 shows the frequency domain and the bandwidth. 3.44 Figure 3.15 The bandwidth for Example 3.12 3.45 Example 3.13 An example of a nonperiodic composite signal is the signal propagated by an AM radio station. In the United States, each AM radio station is assigned a 10-kHz bandwidth. The total bandwidth dedicated to AM radio ranges from 530 to 1700 kHz. We will show the rationale behind this 10-kHz bandwidth in Chapter 5. 3.46 Example 3.14 Another example of a nonperiodic composite signal is the signal propagated by an FM radio station. In the United States, each FM radio station is assigned a 200- kHz bandwidth. The total bandwidth dedicated to FM radio ranges from 88 to 108 MHz. We will show the rationale behind this 200-kHz bandwidth in Chapter 5. 3.47 Example 3.15 Another example of a nonperiodic composite signal is the signal received by an old-fashioned analog black- and-white TV. A TV screen is made up of pixels. If we assume a resolution of 525 × 700, we have 367,500 pixels per screen. If we scan the screen 30 times per second, this is 367,500 × 30 = 11,025,000 pixels per second. The worst-case scenario is alternating black and white pixels. We can send 2 pixels per cycle. Therefore, we need 11,025,000 / 2 = 5,512,500 cycles per second, or Hz. The bandwidth needed is 5.5125 MHz. 3.48 3-3 DIGITAL SIGNALS In addition to being represented by an analog signal, information can also be represented by a digital signal. For example, a 1 can be encoded as a positive voltage and a 0 as zero voltage. A digital signal can have more than two levels. In this case, we can send more than 1 bit for each level. Topics discussed in this section: Bit Rate Bit Length Digital Signal as a Composite Analog Signal Application Layer 3.49 Figure 3.16 Two digital signals: one with two signal levels and the other with four signal levels 3.50 Note Appendix C reviews information about exponential and Appendix Clogarithmic reviewsfunctions. information about exponential and logarithmic functions. 3.51