Optimization
Optimization
Optimization
Notes on Phase
Figure below shows a signal in both the time and frequency domains.
Composite Signals
So far, we have focused on simple sine waves. Simple sine waves have many
applications in daily life. We can send a single sine wave to carry electric energy
from one place to another. For example, the power company sends a single sine wave
with a frequency of 60 Hz to distribute electric energy to houses and businesses.
If we had only one single sine wave to convey a conversation over the phone, it
would make no sense and carry no information. We would just hear a buzz.
A composite signal is made of many simple sine waves.
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.
In the early 1900s, the French mathematician Jean-Baptiste Fourier showed that
any composite signal is actually a combination of simple sine waves with different
frequencies, According to Fourier analysis, any composite signal is a combination of
simple sine waves with different frequencies, amplitudes, and phases.
Time domain
figure (3.10)
The amplitude of the sine wave with frequency f is almost the same as the peak
amplitude of the composite signal. The amplitude of the sine wave with frequency 3f
is one-third of that of the first, and the amplitude of the sine wave with frequency 9f
is one-ninth of the first. The frequency of the sine wave with frequency f is the same
as the frequency of the composite signal; it is called
the fundamental frequency, or first harmonic. The sine wave with frequency 3f has a
frequency of 3 times the fundamental frequency; it is called the third harmonic. The
third sine wave with frequency 9f has a frequency of 9 times the fundamental
frequency; it is called the ninth harmonic.
Bandwidth
The bandwidth of a composite signal is the difference between the highest and the
lowest frequencies contained in that signal.
Figure 3.12 shows the concept of bandwidth.
The figure depicts two composite signals, one periodic and the other nonperiodic.
The bandwidth of the periodic signal contains all integer frequencies between 1000
and 5000 (1000, 1001, 1002, ...). The bandwidth
of the nonperiodic signals has the same range, but the frequencies are continuous.
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
B =fh - fl = 900 - 100 =800 Hz
The spectrum has only five spikes, at 100, 300, 500, 700, and 900 Hz (see Figure
3.13).
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, fz the lowest frequency, and B the bandwidth. Then
B =fh - fz 20 =60 – fz fz = 60 – 20 = 40 Hz
The spectrum contains all integer frequencies. We show this by a series of spikes
(see Figure 3.14).
We send 1 bit per level in part a of the figure and 2 bits per level in part b of the
figure. In general, if a signal has L levels, each level needs log L bits.
Example 3.16
A digital signal has eight levels. How many bits are needed per level? We calculate
the number of bits from the formula
Number of bits per level = log 8 = 3
Each signal level is represented by 3 bits.
Bit Rate
Most digital signals are nonperiodic, and thus period and frequency are not
appropriate characteristics. Another term-bit rate (instead of frequency)-is used to
describe digital signals. The bit rate is the number of bits sent in Is, expressed in bits
per second (bps). Figure 3.16 shows the bit rate for two signals.
Example 3.18
Assume we need to download text documents that have of 100 pages . What is the
required bit rate of the channel?
Solution:
A page is an average of 24 lines with 80 characters in each line. If we assume that
one character requires 8 bits, the bit rate is
100 x 24 x 80 x 8 =1,636,000 bps =1.636 Mbps
Bit Length
The bit length is the distance one bit occupies on the transmission medium.
Bit length = propagation speed x bit duration
1- Baseband Transmission
Baseband transmission means sending a digital signal over a channel without
changing the digital signal to an analog signal.
The significant bandwidth of a signal increases with bit rate. This means when the bit
rate is increased, we have wider significant bandwidth, and consequently we need
medium with wider bandwidth to transfer that signal. The maximum bit rate a
transmission medium can transfer is called channel capacity of the medium.for
example , a normal telephone line with a bandwidth of 3000 Hz is capable of
transferring up to 20000 bps, but other factors can decrease this rate.