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Unguided Media

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Unguided Media Data Transmission Lesson Objectives By the end of this lesson, you should be able to: List the impairments found in unguided transmission media ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Unguided Media


1
Unguided Media
2
Data Transmission
3
Lesson Objectives
  • By the end of this lesson, you should be able to
  • List the impairments found in unguided
    transmission media
  • Describe the impairments found in unguided
    transmission media
  • List three major design considerations for
    antennas and describe their relationship
  • Describe the characteristics of terrestrial
    microwave, satellite, and radio wireless
    transmission
  • Distinguish between LEO, MEO, and GEO satellite
    systems
  • Describe what is meant by VSAT

4
Unguided Media
  • Unguided media no medium to control or contain
    signals therefore, no boundaries
  • Unguided media air, atmosphere
  • Types of unguided media systems
  • Microwave
  • Satellite
  • Radio

5
Transmission Impairments
  • Analog signal impairments result in random
    modifications that degrade signal quality, and
    can cause errors
  • Digital signal impairments result in bit errors
  • Types of unguided media impairments
  • Free-space loss
  • Absorption
  • Atmospheric absorption
  • Multipath
  • Refraction
  • Noise/Interference

6
Free Space Loss
  • Unguided media has no boundaries, so signals
    can disperse more widely and more easily
  • Signal dispersion directly relates to distance
  • Free-space loss path loss
  • Primary cause of signal loss

7
Free-Space Loss Characteristics
  • The higher the frequency, the greater the
    free-space loss
  • Compensate with
  • Higher gain antennas
  • Higher transmitter power
  • Shorter spans
  • Directional antennas

8
Absorption
  • Waves can be absorbed by objects buildings,
    trees, hills
  • Organic materials absorb more than inorganic
  • Pine needles especially effective in absorbing
    radio frequency emissions (800 MHz range)
  • At 2.4 GHz, loss 0.35 dB/meter of loss
  • Compensate with
  • Higher gain antennas
  • Higher transmitter power levels
  • Shorter spacing between transmitter and receiver
    i.e., shorter spans
  • Spans with fewer objects in the transmission paths

9
Atmospheric Absorption
  • Atmospheric conditions absorb waves
  • Water vapor, oxygen greatest contributors
  • Peak attenuation _at_ 22 GHz due to water vapor
    less below 15 GHz
  • Peak attenuation _at_ 60 GHz due to oxygen less
    below 30 GHz
  • Rain, fog major impediments
  • Heavy rain 0.5 dB/mile of loss (_at_ 5.8 GHz)
  • Fog 0.07 dB/mile of loss (_at_ 5.8 GHz)
  • Compensate with
  • Lower frequencies
  • Shorter spans

10
Multipath Fading
Reflected path
Reflected path
Compensate for multipath fading by careful site
selection
11
Multipath Fading
  • Waves reflect off of objects buildings,
    vehicles, water, etc.
  • Some reflected waves travel to intended
    destination
  • One direct signal, multiple indirect signals,
    and
  • Waves arrive with different delays result
    phase differences
  • Waves can either contribute to, or detract from,
    direct signal
  • Also known as Rayleigh fading

12
Fresnel Zones
2
1
D1
D2
F1
? wavelength
13
Fresnel Zones So What?
  • F1 1st Fresnel Zone.
  • Every point where distance is exactly ½
    wavelength longer than direct path
  • F2 2nd Fresnel Zone.
  • Every point where distance is exactly 1
    wavelength longer than direct path
  • Reflections from
  • Odd Fresnel Zone reduces signal level at
    receiver
  • Even Fresnel Zone increases signal level at
    receiver

14
Refraction
  • Waves are bent as they pass through atmosphere
  • Signal speed increases with altitude
  • Somewhat predictable, but weather conditions can
    cause aberrations in tendencies

15
Noise
  • Noise unwanted electromagnetic energy inserted
    in the signals somewhere between transmission and
    reception
  • Types of Noise
  • Thermal Noise
  • Cochannel interference
  • Intermodulation noise

16
Thermal Noise
  • As with guided media, thermal noise is
    unavoidable
  • Arise from the thermal activity of devices and
    media
  • Impact increases as signal strength decreases

17
Spectrum Reuse
  • Wireless spectrum is limited a major limitation
    to wireless systems
  • Two fundamental solution sets
  • Space division carve up geography into smaller
    coverage areas
  • Multiple access share spectrum
  • among several users

While increasing the number of possible users,
these solutions also can lead to other types of
noise/interference
18
Cochannel Interference
  • Occurs when more than 1 transmitter in wireless
    system is on same frequency
  • Caused by frequency assignments with too little
    geographic dispersion
  • By-product of basic tenet of cellular systems
    frequency reuse
  • Managed or reduced by
  • Reducing power levels
  • Maintaining geographic dispersion
  • Types of antennas
  • Management of cochannel interference is the
    number 1 limiting factor
  • in maximizing capacity of a wireless system

19
Cochannel Interference
  • Use reduced gain antennas
  • Decrease power output
  • Use downtilt antennas
  • Reduce height of towers

20
Intermodulation Interference
  • Occurs whenever signals of different frequencies
    share the same medium
  • When two frequencies share the same medium,
    supplemental frequencies are produced (harmonics)
  • a ß, a ß
  • Could interfere with deliberate signals at these
    resultant frequencies
  • Degree of noise is a function of power output
  • Occurs when there is some nonlinearity in system
  • Can be managed through compensating circuits

21
Unguided Transmission
  • Key is the antenna
  • Role of antenna conversion between electrical
    signals and airborne signals
  • Transmission antenna gets electrical signals,
    and radiates airborne energy into the medium
    i.e., air
  • Reception antenna receives airborne waves from
    the surrounding medium and converts them to
    electrical signals
  • Every wireless system MUST have antennas
  • Antenna design is related to three major
    considerations
  • Frequency to be transmitted
  • Direction of transmission
  • Power needed for transmission

22
Antenna Relationship to Frequency
?
Speed of light
  • Wavelength (?)

Frequency
Frequency Wavelength
AM Radio 530 kHz 1,853 feet Cell Phones 900
MHz 12 inches Satellite TV 11.7 GHz 1 inch
Antenna length should be proportional to
wavelength for optimal transmission
23
Impact of Direction on Antenna Design
Omnidirectional
24
Microwave
  • First used by military in WWII
  • Successful application led to civilian use
    substitute for coaxial cable in late 1940s
  • Generally operates at 1 GHz 50 GHz
  • Vulnerable to reflections, absorption, frequency
    reuse
  • Highly directional beam
  • Affected by weather
  • Requires line-of-sight free of obstructions
  • Distance between Systems also dependent upon
    frequencies
  • 2, 4, 6 GHz system towers could range 45 miles
    with LOS restrictions, closer to 35 miles
  • 18, 23, 45 GHz systems range 1 5 miles

25
Microwave Antennas
  • Highly Directional
  • Most common form is a parabolic reflector
  • Dish 6 10 in diameter
  • Radome loss 0.5 1 dB

Radome
Reflective Dish
Feed Horn
Coax cable or wave guide
26
Microwave Pros and Cons
  • Cost savings
  • Portability
  • Reconfiguration flexibility
  • Bandwidth
  • Requires line-of-sight
  • Susceptible to natural environmental conditions
  • Regulatory licensing requirements
  • Potential community environmental restrictions

27
Satellite
  • 1947 Arthur Clarke (2001 A Space Odyssey)
    presented a paper suggesting the use of
    satellites for communications
  • 1963 NASA launched 1st experimental satellite
  • 1965 1st commercial satellite
  • 2003 space clutter gt250 communications
    satellites, total satellites exceed 700 plus
    250,000 pieces of debris
  • Satellite microwave repeater/relay station
  • Receives transmissions on uplink, retransmits
    them on downlink

28
Satellite Effectiveness
Point-to-multipoint communications e.g., USA Today
Economic benefit increases as of locations
increase
Footprint
29
Satellite Characteristics
  • Key component transponder
  • Accepts signal from earth
  • Shifts signal to another frequency
  • Amplifies signal and
  • Rebroadcasts signal to earth
  • Distance has impact on system
  • Requires significant power
  • Amount of delay is measurable and significant
    factor
  • Uplink always at a higher frequency than downlink

30
Classes of Satellites
Three main classes of satellites
MEO
GEO
LEO
31
GEO Satellites
  • Geosynchronous earth orbit
  • 22,300 miles above earth
  • Requires the most power
  • Adds greatest delay 0.25 sec/leg
  • Position is constant relative to earth same
    rotational speed as the earth
  • Provides largest footprint of all satellites
  • Three satellites can cover earth
  • Applications One way broadcasts, international TV

32
MEO Satellites
  • Middle earth orbit
  • Orbit 6,200 9,400 miles above earth
  • Delay reduced to 0.05 per leg
  • Smaller footprint requires 10-15 to cover earth
  • Applications regional use due to footprint and
    speed, such as mobile voice, low-speed data
  • Most rapidly growing application GPS

33
LEO Satellites
  • Low earth orbit
  • Closest to earth 400 1,000 miles above earth
  • Least amount of delay 0.025 seconds/leg
  • Least amount of power required can be directed
    into users handheld device
  • Smallest footprint requires approximately 60 to
    cover earth
  • Functionality is new due to speed and small
    footprint switching capability was needed and
    the system is very complex
  • Jitter is a significant issue
  • Applications mobile voice, low-speed data,
    high-speed data

34
VSAT
  • Very Small Aperture Terminal
  • Characterized by very small antenna (0.6 meters
    or less)
  • Low cost, easy and quick installation
  • Applications
  • Vehicle tracking systems
  • Broadband Internet access (Hughes DirecPC
    provides downlinks _at_ 2 Mbps)
  • Business video

35
Satellites Pros and Cons
  • Access to remote areas
  • Covers large geographies
  • Insensitive to topology
  • Insensitive to distance-related costs
  • High bandwidth
  • Economic value increases with number of locations
  • High initial cost
  • Propagation delay
  • Vulnerable to environmental interference
  • Licensing requirements
  • Vulnerable to space clutter
  • Low security requires encryption

36
Radio
  • Microwave
  • Antennas are less directional, ranging to full
    omnidirectional
  • Common frequency range 3 KHz 300 GHz
  • Most significant application mobile telephony

37
Radio Pros and Cons
  • Less sensitive to environmental attenuation
  • Cost savings
  • Portability
  • Reconfiguration flexibility
  • Bandwidth
  • Requires line-of-sight
  • Regulatory licensing requirements
  • Potential community environmental restrictions
  • Vulnerable to multipath interference

38
What Weve Covered
  • List the impairments found in unguided
    transmission media
  • Describe the impairments found in unguided
    transmission media
  • List three major design considerations for
    antennas and describe their relationship
  • Describe the characteristics of terrestrial
    microwave, satellite, and radio wireless
    transmission
  • Distinguish between LEO, MEO, and GEO satellite
    systems
  • Describe what is meant by VSAT
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