Physical Layer Flashcards
Twisted Pair
Used in telephone lines, LANs
Twisting reduces noise as the magnetic fields induce currents in opposite directions
Two types: Unsheilded(UTP), Sheilded (STP)
Coaxial Cable
Used for Ethernet LANs, cable tv, and MANs
Good shielding reduces noise
More bandwidth for longer distances and higher rates than twisted pair (capable of 1Gbps over 1km)
Power Lines
A network that uses household electrical wiring
Convenient to use, but not great for sending data
Fiber Optics
Used in long-distance ISP links
Common for high rates and long distance
Enormous bandwidth and tiny signal loss
Light carried in very long, thin strand of glass
Two types:
Multi-mode: Light can bounce(wider core). Used with LEDs for cheaper, shorter-distance links
Single-mode: Core so narrow so that light cannot bounce around. Used with lasers. Capable of carrying 100s of Gbps over 100s of kilometres
Radio transmission
Radio signals penetrate buildings well and propagate for long distances
Microwave Transmission
Microwaves have a lot of bandwidth
Used indoors(wifi) and outdoors (between masts of 4G, 5G networks, between satellites)
The signal is attenuated/reflected by everyday objects
Strength varies with mobility due to multipath fading
Infrared transmission
Used for short-range communication, does pass through objects
Transmission impairment
A signal is affected by
Attenuation: loss of signal strength
Noise: The random or unwanted signal that mixes up with the original signal
Distortion: Alteration of signal shape or form(induced by attenuation, noise or delay)
Simplex transmission
One-way communication e.g. keyboard to computer
Half-duplex transmission
Two-way communication link, but only one system can talk at a time. e.g. walkie talkie
Full duplex
Transmit data in both directions simultaneously. E.g. telephone.
Most communication systems work in full duplex(extra cost is marginal)
Parallel transmission
Transmits a group of bits simultaneously - high bit rate
Expensive over long distances because of the need for thicker cable
Synchronisation problem over long distance (bit skew)
Serial transmission
Transmits bits one after another - slower than parallel transmission
More reliable and cheaper for transmission over longer distances
Incurs additional complexity for sending and receiving devices (the sender must determine the order bits are sent, the receiver must determine the order to reconstruct a byte)
Multiplexing
Allows the carrying of multiple signals on a single medium(share channel among users).
Allows for more efficient use of the transmission medium(better utilisation)
Frequency division multiplexing
Shares the channel by placing users on different frequencies.
Takes advantage of the fact that the useful bandwidth of the medium exceeds the required bandwidth of a signal
Filters used at receiver to separate channels