Difference between revisions of "A2-Radio Communication principles"

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A2
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{{Building Networks TOC}}
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=⌘ Coding and Modulation=
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A modulated radio signal can be written in a general form:
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<math> C(t) = A(t) cos(2\pi f(t) t + \varphi(t)) </math>
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Any of these three parameters can be varied: amplitude-, frequency- or phase-modulation.
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* Channel-coding is used to reduce bit-error-rate, e.g. through forward error correction.
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* Multiplexing is used to split the total amount of radio into smaller pieces. Typical: time, frequency or code multiplex. <span style="color:#000B80">examples
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[Source:K.E. Walter, Basics of Mobile Communications]
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== Comments ==
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[[File:F3-7.png|550px|right]]
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Figure: A frequency band consists of ''n'' channels.
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Example GSM: the upload band is from 880-915 Unik/MHz, which is 35 Unik/MHz. With a carrier of 200 kHz we have 175 channels, which have to be divided between the various operators.
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=⌘ Modulation types =
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[[File:WalterModulation.png|450px|right]]
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* Amplitude shift keying (ASK)
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* Frequency shift keying (FSK)
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* Phase shift keying (PSK)
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[Source:K.E. Walter, Basics of Mobile Communications]
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=⌘ Frequency and time division multiplexing =
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[[File:WalterMultiplexing.png|450px|right]]
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[[File:WalterGSM.png|450px|right]]
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* Time domain, e.g. 8 slots in GSM
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* Frequency domain, e.g. up- and downlink in specific bands
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* Code division (CDM), specific codes
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[Source:K.E. Walter, Basics of Mobile Communications]
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=⌘  Code division multiple access =
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<span style="color:#0B0080"> UMTS as an example  (in one of the future lectures)

Latest revision as of 19:32, 21 September 2014

Building .... Networks
History, Now and Future
History
Pioneers: Maxwell, Hertz,...
1G, 2G,... 5G networks
Frequencies and Standards
Future Challenges
A-Basics of Communication
Electromagnetic Signals
Radio Communication Principles
Digital communication: Signal/Noise Ratio
Signal strength and Capacity: Shannon
B-Antennas and Propagation
Free Space Propagation
Antennas, Gain, Radiation Pattern
Multipath Propagation, Reflection, Diffraction
Attenuation, Scattering
Interference and Fading (Rayleigh, Rician, …)
Mobile Communication dependencies
C-Propagation models
Environments (indoor, outdoor to indoor, vehicular)
Outdoor (Lee, Okumura, Hata, COST231 models)
Indoor (One-slope, multiwall, linear attenuation)
D-System Comparison
Proximity: RFID, NFC
Short Range: ZigBee, Bluetooth, ANT+,...
WLAN/Wifi/802.11...
Mobile: GSM, UMTS, IMT-A (WiMAX, LTE)
E-Mobility
Mobile Network mobility
IP mobility
F-Network Building
5G and Future Networks
5G Heterogeneous Networks
Basic Internet
Video Distribution Networks
Coverage simulations
Coverage simulations
Traffic simulations
Network Capacity simulations
Building .... Networks

⌘ Coding and Modulation

A modulated radio signal can be written in a general form: Any of these three parameters can be varied: amplitude-, frequency- or phase-modulation.

  • Channel-coding is used to reduce bit-error-rate, e.g. through forward error correction.
  • Multiplexing is used to split the total amount of radio into smaller pieces. Typical: time, frequency or code multiplex. examples

[Source:K.E. Walter, Basics of Mobile Communications]

Comments

F3-7.png

Figure: A frequency band consists of n channels.

Example GSM: the upload band is from 880-915 Unik/MHz, which is 35 Unik/MHz. With a carrier of 200 kHz we have 175 channels, which have to be divided between the various operators.


⌘ Modulation types

WalterModulation.png
  • Amplitude shift keying (ASK)
  • Frequency shift keying (FSK)
  • Phase shift keying (PSK)

[Source:K.E. Walter, Basics of Mobile Communications]

⌘ Frequency and time division multiplexing

WalterMultiplexing.png
WalterGSM.png
  • Time domain, e.g. 8 slots in GSM
  • Frequency domain, e.g. up- and downlink in specific bands
  • Code division (CDM), specific codes

[Source:K.E. Walter, Basics of Mobile Communications]

⌘ Code division multiple access

UMTS as an example (in one of the future lectures)