Physical Layer Flashcards
Properties of Copper Cabling
- Inexpensive, easy to install
- low resistance to electrical current.
- Issues with Electromagnetic Interference (EMI), Radio Frequency Interference (RFI) and Crosstalk.
How to deal with EMI and RFI
metallic shielding and grounding
How to deal with crosstalk
twisting opposing circuit pair wires together
Properties of Fiber-Optic cabling
- transmit data over longer distances
- high bandwidth
- immune to EMI & RFI
- made of flexible extremely thin strand of very pure glass
- uses laser or LED to encode bits as pulses of light
Best case usage of Fibre-optic cabling
Enterprise Networks - backbone cabling applications and interconnecting infrastructure devices
Fiber-to-the-Home (FTTH) - always-on broadband services to home and small business
Long-Haul Networks - connect countries and cities
Submarine cable Networks - harsh undersea environments
Single-mode fiber
Very small core, expensive lasers, LED transmit in straight line, long-distance applications
Multimode fiber
larger core, uses less expensive LEDs, LEDs transmit at different angles, up to Gbps over 550 meters
Wireless media
Uses radio or microwave frequencies.
Coverage is impacted by physical characteristics of deployment location.
Interference - can be disrupted by many common devices
Security - requires no physical access
WLANs operate in half-duplex, can result in reduced bandwidth
Types of Copper Cabling
Unshielded Twisted-Pair
Shielded Twisted-Pair
Coaxial Cable
Cable types (UTP)
Ethernet Straight-Through - Host to Network Device
Ethernet Crossover - interconnect similar devices
Rollover - Cisco Proprietary