Lecture 3
Lecture 3
Lecture 3
Networking Media
Lecture Three
Week 3
Shareef M. Shareef (PhD)
2021-2022
1
Outline
Copper Media
Optical Media
Wireless Media
Networking media
Copper media uses electrical voltage to represent data on the
wire.
EMI & RFI attack the quality of electrical signals on the cable.
EMI/RFI Noise
• Two ways to prevent EMI/RFI Noise:
10BASE5
10BaseF 10Mbps baseband over fiber-optic cable
10BASE-FB (10Mbps BASEband-FiberBackbone)
Baseband & Broadband
• In Baseband, can be defined as a single channel that uses the entire bandwidth of the media,
which means that the same channel can be used to send and receive signals. However, the
sending and receiving cannot occur on the same wire at the same time. In Baseband the data is
sent as digital signals through the media,
Broadband uses analogue signals in the form of optical or electromagnetic waves over multiple
transmission frequencies. For signals to be both sent and received, the transmission media must be
split into two channels. Alternatively, two cables can be used: one to send and one to receive
transmissions.
Coaxial Cable
• The purpose of twisted pair helps to reduce cross talk and cancel electronic
magnetic interference (EMI) from external sources; for example, electronic
magnetic radiation from unshielded twisted pair (UTP) cables.
Category 3: Used in 10BASE-T networks. Can transmit data at speeds up to (10 Mbps).
Category 4: Used in Token Ring networks. Can transmit data at speeds up to (16 Mbps).
Category 6:Typically, Category 6 cable consists of four pairs of 24 American Wire Gauge
(AWG) copper wires. Category 6 cable is currently the fastest standard for UTP.
Type of Cables
1. A straight-through cable
2. A crossover cable
3. Rollover Cable
Buffer coating - Is a plastic coating that protects the fiber from damage
and moisture.
Core - Is a thin glass centre of the fiber where the light travels
21
Fiber-optic
• A fiber optic communications channel begins with a light source and ends with
photodetector.
• The light carried on fiber cables is generated by either laser or a Light Emitting
Diode (LED) that converts data to pulses.
• Photodiodes at the receiving end interpret the light signal, decode the bit
pattern, and send it up to data link layer.
Advantages:
• Fiber optic cables have a much greater bandwidth than metal cables. This
means that they can carry more data.
• Fiber optic cables are less susceptible than metal cables to interference.
• Fiber optic cables are much thinner and lighter than metal wires. Data can be
transmitted digitally (the natural form for computer data) rather than analogically.
Disadvantages:
• Fiber optic cables are expensive to install.
• Fiber optic cables are more fragile than wire and are difficult to splice
23
24
Wireless media
• Wireless is a term used to describe telecommunications in which
electromagnetic waves carry the signal over part or all of the
communication path.
Wireless Features:
• Do not require physical cabling
• Particularly useful for remote access for laptop users
• Eliminate cable faults and cable breaks.
• Signal interference and security issue.
To receive the signals from the access point, a PC or laptop must
install a wireless adapter card (wireless NIC).
Disadvantages:
Limited speed in comparison to other network topologies
Potential security issues associated with wireless transmissions
IEEE and Networking standards
31
Networking Standards
32
Next Lecture (Week 4)
Network Maths