To be transmitted data must be
transformed into electromagnetic signals. Data can be analog or digital. Analog
data takes continues values on some interval. For example, voice and video (are
continuously varying patterns of intensity). Digital data take on discrete
values, for example, data stored in a computer memory.
An analog signal is a
continuously varying electromagnetic wave that may be propagated over a media. A
digital signal is a sequence of voltage pulses that may be transmitted over a media.
Periodic and Non-Periodic Signals
A signal is periodic if it
completes a pattern within a measurable time frame, called a period, and
repeats that pattern over identical subsequent periods. The completion of one
full pattern is called a cycle. A
period is defined, as the amount of time (in seconds) required to complete one
full cycle. Period is represented by T. A sine wave is the simple periodic
signal.
A non-periodic or an aperiodic signal changes continuously
without exhibiting a pattern or cycle that repeats over time.
Both analog and digital signals can
be periodic or non-periodic. We commonly use periodic analog signals (because
they needs less bandwidth) and non-periodic digital signals (because, they can
represent variation in data).
Period refers to the amount of
time in seconds, a signal needs to complete one cycle. Frequency refers to the number of periods in one second. Frequency
is expressed in Hertz (Hz) which is
cycle per second.
Period is the inverse of frequency.
If a signal does not change at
all, it never completes a cycle, so its frequency is zero. When a signal change instantaneously, its period is zero,
since frequency is the inverse of period, in this case, the frequency is 1/0 or
infinite.
A composite signal is a signal
made of many simple signals. The bandwidth
of a composite signal is the difference between the highest and lowest
frequencies contained in that signal.
Digital Signal
Most digital signals are
aperiodic and thus period or frequency is not appropriate. We use bit interval
(instead of period) and bit rate (instead of frequency) to describe digital
signals. The bit interval is the time required to send one single bit. The bit
rate is the number of bits sent in one second, usually expressed in bits per
second (bps).
If a digital signal has L levels then each bit level needs log2L
bits, as shown below.
Two level digital signal
|
Four level digital signal |
We can transmit
a digital signal either by base band
transmission or by broadband
transmission. In base band transmission, the raw signal is transmit without any
modification. It is possible only if we have a low-pass channel with an
infinite or very high bandwidth. In broadband transmission we modulate the
original signal before transmit.
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