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Chapter Three

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Chapter Three The Media Conducted and Wireless * Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and Wireless How does a thin glass cable transmit data? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter Three


1
Chapter Three
  • The Media
  • Conducted and Wireless

2
Introduction
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • The world of computer would not exist if there
    were no medium(??? ????) by which to transfer
    data
  • The two major categories of media include
  • Conducted media
  • Wireless media

3
Twisted Pair Wire (Conducted media)
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • One or more pairs of single conductor(????) wires
    that have been twisted around each other
  • Twisted pair wire is classified by category.
    Twisted pair is currently Category 1 through
    Category 7, although Categories 2 and 4 are
    nearly obsolete(????)
  • two important laws from physics
  • (1) A current passing through a wire creates a
    magnetic field around that wire
  • (2) a magnetic field passing over a wire induces
    a current in that wire.
  • Therefore, a current or signal in one wire can
    produce an unwanted current or signal, called
    crosstalk, in a second wire.

4
Twisted Pair Wire
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • Twisting the wires helps to eliminate
    electromagnetic interference between the two
    wires
  • Shielding can further help to eliminate
    interference

5
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • If the two wires run parallel to each other the
    chance for crosstalk increases.
  • If the two wires cross each other at
    perpendicular angles the chance for crosstalk
    decreases.

6
Twisted Pair Wire
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
7
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
8
Coaxial Cable (Conducted media)
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • A single wire wrapped in a foam insulation(?????
    ???? ) surrounded by a braided metal shield to
    block electromagnetic signals from entering the
    cable and produce noise, then covered in a
    plastic jacket. Cable comes in various
    thicknesses
  • Baseband coaxial technology uses digital
    signaling in which the cable carries only one
    channel of digital data
  • Broadband coaxial technology transmits analog
    signals and is capable of supporting multiple
    channels of data simultaneously

9
Coaxial Cable
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
10
Coaxial Cable
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
11
Fiber Optic Cable (Conducted media)
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • A thin glass cable approximately a little thicker
    than a human hair surrounded by a plastic coating
    and packaged into an insulated(????? ) cable
  • A photo diode or laser generates pulses of light
    which travel down the fiber optic cable and are
    received by a photo receptor

12
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • How does a thin glass cable transmit data?
  • A light source, called a photo diode, is placed
    at the transmitting end and quickly switched on
    and off to produce light pulses.
  • These light pulses travel down the glass cable
    and are detected by an optic sensor called a
    photo receptor on the receiving end.
  • The light source can be either a simple and
    inexpensive light-emitting diode (LED), laser.
  • The laser is much more expensive than the LED,
    and it can produce much higher data transmission
    rates.
  • Fiber optic cable advantages
  • providing high-speed, low-error data transmission
    rates.
  • Small noise as the light pulses bounce around
    inside the glass cable, this noise is
    significantly less than noise generated in
    twisted pair wires or coaxial cables
  • More secure than twisted pair wires or coaxial
    cables, it is impossible to wiretap. Without
    physically break into the line

13
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • fiber-optic cable has two small disadvantages
  • Light pulses can travel in one direction only.
    Thus, to support a two-way transmission of data,
    two fiber-optic cables are necessary.
  • Its higher cost than twisted pair wires or
    coaxial cables

14
Fiber Optic Cable
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • Fiber optic cable is capable of supporting
    millions of bits per second for 1000s of meters
  • Thick cable (62.5/125 microns) causes more
    ray(???? ) collisions, so you have to transmit
    slower. This is step index multimode fiber.
    Typically use LED for light source, shorter
    distance transmissions
  • Thin cable (8.3/125 microns) very little
    reflection, fast transmission, typically uses a
    laser, longer transmission distances known as
    single mode fiber

15
Fiber Optic Cable
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
16
Fiber Optic Cable
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • Fiber optic cable is susceptible(???? ) to
    reflection (where the light source bounces around
    inside the cable) and refraction(???????? )
    (where the light source passes out of the core
    and into the surrounding cladding(?????? ))
  • Thus, fiber optic cable is not perfect either.
    Noise is still a potential problem

17
Fiber Optic Cable
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
18
Fiber Optic Cable
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • It is very common to mix fiber with twisted pair
    in LANs

19
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
20
Wireless Media
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • Radio, satellite transmissions, and infrared
    light are all different forms of electromagnetic
    waves that are used to transmit data
  • Technically speaking in wireless transmissions,
    space is the medium
  • Note in the following figure how each source
    occupies a different set of frequencies

21
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
22
Terrestrial(???? ) Microwave
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • Transmission systems transmit tightly focused
    beams of radio signals from one ground-based
    microwave transmission antenna to another.
  • Land-based, line-of-sight transmission
  • Approximately 20-30 miles between towers
  • Transmits data at hundred of millions of bits per
    second
  • Signals will not pass through solid objects
  • Popular with telephone companies and business to
    business transmissions
  • might be less expensive in the long run than
    leasing a high-speed telephone line with monthly
    payment.
  • once the system is purchased and installed, no
    telephone service fees are necessary.

23
Terrestrial(???? ) Microwave
  • Many microwave antennas are located on top of
    free-standing towers, The higher the tower, the
    farther the possible transmission distance.
  • Another factor that limits transmission distance
    is the number of objects that might obstruct the
    path of transmission signals.
  • Buildings, hills, forests, and even heavy rain
    and snowfall all interfere with the transmission
    of microwave signals.
  • Disadvantages
  • loss of signal strength and interference from
    other signals,
  • in addition to the costs of either leasing the
    service or installing and maintaining the
    antennas.

24
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
25
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • Often the microwave antennas are on towers or
    buildings

26
Satellite Microwave
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • Similar to terrestrial microwave except the
    signal travels from a ground station on earth to
    a satellite and back to another ground station
  • Can also transmit signals from one satellite to
    another
  • Satellites can be classified by how far out into
    orbit each one is (LEO, MEO, GEO, and HEO)

27
Satellite Microwave
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
28
Satellite Microwave
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • LEO Low Earth Orbit 100 to 1000 miles out.
    Used for wireless e-mail, special mobile
    telephones, pagers, spying, videoconferencing
  • MEO Middle Earth Orbit 1000 to 22,300 miles.
    Used for GPS (global positioning systems) and
    government
  • GEO Geosynchronous(???????? ?? ?????) Earth
    Orbit 22,300 miles. Always over the same
    position on earth (and always over the equator(??
    ????????)). Used for weather, television,
    government operations
  • HEO - highly elliptical orbit, which is used by
    governments for spying and by scientific agencies
    for observing celestial bodies(????????
    ???????).
  • It follows an elliptical pattern. When the
    satellite is at its perigee (closest point to the
    Earth), it takes photographs of the Earth. When
    the satellite reaches its apogee (farthest point
    from the Earth), it transmits the data to the
    ground station. At its apogee, the satellite can
    also photograph objects in space.

29
Satellite Microwave
30
Satellite Microwave
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • Satellite microwave can also be classified by its
    configuration
  • Bulk carrier configuration
  • the satellite system and all its assigned
    frequencies are devoted to one user.
  • transmitting large amounts of data in a very
    short time, used for large application.
  • entire satellite system by one user. For example,
    a telephone company use a bulk carrier satellite
    system to transmit thousands of long-distance
    telephone calls.
  • Multiplexed configuration (Multiple users )
  • The ground station accepts input from multiple
    sources.
  • Single-user earth station configuration.
  • each user employs his or her own ground station
    to transmit data to the satellite

31
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
32
Infrared Transmissions
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • Transmissions that use a focused ray of light in
    the infrared frequency range
  • Very common with remote control devices, but can
    also be used for device-to-device transfers, such
    as PDA to computer

33
Bluetooth
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • is a wireless technology that uses low power,
    short-range radio frequencies to communicate
    between two or more devices.
  • Bluetooth is a specification for short-range,
    point-to-point or point-to-multipoint voice and
    data transfer
  • Bluetooth can transmit through solid, non-metal
    objects Thus, a device that is transmitting
    Bluetooth signals can be carried in a pocket or
    briefcase.
  • Its typical link range is from 10 cm to 10 m, but
    can be extended to 100 m by increasing the power

34
Bluetooth
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • Bluetooth will enable users to connect to a wide
    range of computing and telecommunication devices
    without the need of connecting cables
  • Typical uses include phones, pagers, modems, LAN
    access devices, headsets, notebooks, desktop
    computers, and PDAs

35
Bluetooth
  • To appreciate the potential power of Bluetooth
    technology, consider examples
  • You can automatically synchronize all e-mail
    messages between your PDA and your desktop/laptop
    computer
  • as you approach your car, your PDA will tell the
    car to unlock its doors and change the radio to
    your favorite station
  • as you walk up to the front door of your house,
    your PDA will instruct your house to unlock the
    front door, turn on the lights, and turn on an
    entertainment system,
  • and as you sit in a business meeting, your
    PDA/laptop will wirelessly transmit your slide
    presentation to a projector and your notes to
    each participants PDA/laptop.

36
Wireless LAN (IEEE 802.11)
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • This technology transmits data between
    workstations and local area networks using
    high-speed radio frequencies
  • access point is the connection into the wired
    portion of the local area network.
  • Current technologies allow up to 54 Mbps
    (theoretical) data transfer at distances up to
    hundreds of feet)
  • IEEE 802.11n. supporting a 100-Mbps signal
    between wireless devices and uses multiple
    antennas to support multiple independent data
    streams.
  • All protocols802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g, and
    802.11nare now called Wi-Fi.

37
Free Space Optics
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • Uses lasers, or, in some cases, infrared
    transmitting devices, to transmit data between
    two buildings over short distances, such as
    across the street.
  • Data transfer speeds can be as high as 1.25 Gbps,
    higher in the future.
  • Lasers lose their strength when transmitting
    through fog. Thus, if the fog is thick,
    transmission distances can be cut down to less
    than 50 meters
  • Line of sight between buildings
  • Typically short distances, such as across the
    street
  • Newer auto-tracking systems keep lasers aligned
    when buildings shake from wind and traffic

38
ZigBee
  • relatively new wireless technology supported by
    the IEEE 802.15.4 standard. It has been designed
    for data transmission between smaller, often
    embedded, devices that require low data transfer
    rates (20250 Kbps) and low power consumption.
  • For example, home and building automation
    (heating, cooling, security, lighting, and smoke
    detectors), industrial control, automatic meter
    reading, and medical sensing and monitoring.
  • power consumption is so low that some suppliers
    claim that their ZigBee-equipped devices will
    last multiple years on the original battery.
  • Bluetooth is best at replacing cables for short
    distances, while ZigBee will be good at sending
    low-speed signals over short to medium distances.

39
Media Selection Criteria
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • Cost
  • Speed
  • Distance and expandability
  • Environment
  • Security

40
Media Selection Criteria - Cost
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • Different types of cost
  • Initial cost what does a particular type of
    medium cost to purchase? To install?
  • Maintenance / support cost
  • ROI (return on investment) price/performance
    ratio if one medium is cheaper to purchase and
    install but is not cost effective, where is the
    savings?

41
Media Selection Criteria - Speed
Chapter Three - The Media - Conducted and
Wireless
  • Two different forms of speed
  • Propagation speed the time to send the first
    bit across the medium. This speed depends upon
    the medium. Airwaves and fiber are speed of
    light. Copper wire is two thirds the speed of
    light
  • Data transfer speed the time to transmit the
    rest of the bits in the message. This speed is
    measured in bits per second
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