Advance Digital Communication
Advance Digital Communication
Advance Digital Communication
Communication Systems
Lecture #1
Course Instructor,
Dr Nauman Anwar Baig
Text: Digital Communications: Fundamentals and Applications,
By “Bernard Sklar”, Prentice Hall, 2 nd ed, 2001.
References:
Digital Communications, Fourth Edition, J.G. Proakis, McGraw
Hill, 2000.
Communication Systems by Simon Haykin, John Wiley & Sons
inc, 3 Ed.
Modern Digital and Analog Communication Systems, Oxford
University Press, 3rd Ed.
Digital Communication, by Ian A. Glover and Peter M. Grant
Course Outline
Signal and Spectra (Chapter 1)
Formatting and Baseband Modulation (Chapter 2)
Baseband Demodulation/Detection (Chapter 3)
Bandpass Modulation and Demod./Detect. (Chapt. 4)
Synchronization (Chapter 10)
Source Coding (Chapter 13)
Channel Coding (Chapter 6, 7 and 8)
Spread Spectrum Techniques (Chapter 12)
Course Outline
PCM
Baseband demodulation and detection
Communication performance in AWGN channels
Detection of binary signals in Gaussian noise
Match filters
Intersymbol interface and Equalizers
Coherent detection
Communication
Recipient
Brief Description
Information Source
Discrete output values e.g. Keyboard
Analog signal source e.g. output of a microphone
Character
Member of an alphanumeric/symbol (A to Z, 0 to 9)
Characters can be mapped into a sequence of binary digits
using one of the standardized codes such as
ASCII: American Standard Code for Information Interchange
EBCDIC: Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code
Digital Signal Nomenclature
Digital Message
Messages constructed from a finite number of symbols; e.g., printed
language consists of 26 letters, 10 numbers, “space” and several
punctuation marks. Hence a text is a digital message constructed from
about 50 symbols
Morse-coded telegraph message is a digital message constructed from
two symbols “Mark” and “Space”
M - ary
A digital message constructed with M symbols
Digital Waveform
Current or voltage waveform that represents a digital symbol
Bit Rate
Actual rate at which information is transmitted per second
Digital Signal Nomenclature
Baud Rate
Refers to the rate at which the signaling elements are
t denotes time
T0 is the period of x(t).
3. Analog and Discrete Signals
x(t) is classified as an energy signal if, and only if, it has nonzero
but finite energy (0 < Ex < ∞) for all time, where:
T /2
Ex lim
T
x 2 (t ) dt x 2 (t ) dt (1.7)
T /2
A signal is defined as a power signal if, and only if, it has finite
but nonzero power (0 < Px < ∞) for all time, where
T /2
1
Px
2
lim
T T T /2
x (t ) dt (1.8)
(t ) dt
1 (1.9)
(t ) 0 for t 0 (1.10)
(t ) is bounded at t 0 (1.11)
Sifting or Sampling Property
(1.12)
x(t ) (t - t
0 )dt x(t0 )