Lecture 3: The Physical Layer and Transmission Media

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Lecture 3: The Physical Layer and Transmission Media Dr. Mohammed Hawa Electrical Engineering Department University of Jordan EE426: Communication Networks The Physical Layer Converts bit streams into electrical or optical (electromagnetic) signals that can transfer information from one part of the network to another over a transmission medium. An electromagnetic wave propagates through vacuum at a speed of c = 3 x 10 8 m/s and at smaller speeds in other materials. Common transmission media are illustrated in the following slides. 2 1

1. Copper Wires Three Types: Unshielded Twisted Pair (UTP); Shielded Twisted Pair (STP); Coaxial Cable. Advantages: Inexpensive; Easy to Install. Disadvantages: High Interference (except for coaxial cable); High Attenuation; Small Bandwidth. Very common in short-range and medium-range computer networks and telephone networks (i.e., in an office or building). Twisting of copper wires reduces outside interference. 3 Copper Wires 4 2

2. Optical Fibers Flexible fibers made of glass/plastic. Advantages: Minimal Interference; Small Attenuation (a repeater is needed every 100 km instead of every 5 km in copper wires); Wider Bandwidth; Need only a single fiber not a pair of wires to transmit a signal. Disadvantages: Expensive (specially lasers); Special equipment to install; If fiber breaks inside the plastic jacket finding the break point is difficult and requires special equipment to fix (create the splice). Very common in long-range computer networks (i.e., on the level of a city or a country). 5 Optical Fibers (Cont.) Can use Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) to multiplex multiple carries on one fiber thus efficiently utilizing its huge bandwidth. The main transmission technology used on fiber is SDH/SONET. 6 3

3. Radio Frequency/Microwave (Wireless Channel) Use the signal to modulate a radio frequency carrier. Low frequency is RF transmission. Higher frequency is Microwave transmission. Advantages: Easy to setup. Lower cost (no cables). Disadvantages: High attenuation; High Interference; Radio transmission can harm humans if power is high; Microwave requires line-of-sight. 7 Wireless Channel (Cont.) Wi-Fi, Wi-MAX and Bluetooth are examples of networks that use wireless links. TV and AM/FM Radio are older systems that use RF. 8 4

4. Satellite Satellites contain transponders that receive signals from an earth station, amplify these signals and retransmit them to another earth station. Advantages: Larger coverage area compared to Radio/Microwave (suitable for broadcasting); Mobility is possible. Disadvantages: Expensive (Satellite/Earth Station cost); High attenuation; High Interference; Long delay (for GEO satellites). 9 Satellite (Cont.) Three orbits for satellite systems: Geostationary (Geosynchronous) Earth Orbit (GEO) [Examples: Thuraya, Inmarsat and TV broadcasting]. Medium Earth Orbit (MEO) [Examples: GPS (Global Positioning System), Glonass, Satellite Galileo, and Satellites that cover North and South Poles]. Low Earth Orbit (LEO) [Examples: Iridium, Globalstar and Teledesic]. Earth Station Reception Dish 10 5

Optical Fiber Submarine Cables 11 Interactive map @ http://www.submarinecablemap.com 12 6

Submarine Cable Laying 13 Cable Laying (Cont.) 14 7

Cable Laying (Cont.) 15 Cable Cuts: Ship Anchors 16 8

Network Protection using SDH/SONET rings 17 FLAG: Fiber Link Across the Globe FLAG (Fiber Link Across the Globe) is one of the main operators of an optical fiber cable system that connects major cities around the world. FLAG is now part of Global Cloud Xchange. FLAG was built on multiple stages. The parts that cross the middle east are: FLAG Europe-Asia (FEA) FALCON (FLAG Alcatel ) 18 9

FLAG Submarine Cables 19 FLAG Europe-Asia (FEA) Links Western Europe and Japan through the Middle East, India and China. The cable comes ashore at 16 landing points in 13 countries (China, Egypt, Hong Kong, India, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Korea, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Thailand, UAE and UK). It is a two fiber pair, multi-sectioned point-to-point system with a capacity of 20 Gbps on many segments. Went live on November 1997 and is 28,000 km in length. Allowed services include bandwidth purchase and lease of E1, DS-3, STM-1 and STM-4. Initial Capacity (Gbps) 20 Capacity fully upgraded (Gbps) 80+ Fiber Pairs 2 Fiber Pairs 2 Wavelengths per Fiber Pair 1 2 Wavelengths per Fiber Pair 4 Gbps per Wavelength 5 10 Gbps per Wavelength 10 20 10

FLAG Europe-Asia (FEA) 21 FALCON FALCON delivers a high-capacity, self-healing submarine network ring (loop) with multiple landings throughout the Gulf region (Initial launch capacity 50 Gbps, Maximum design capacity of 1.28 Tbps) in addition to four fiber pair route linking the Gulf to Egypt and India (Initial launch at 90 Gbps, Design capacity of 2.56 Tbps). Announced on February 2004. Full service launch in September 2006. Cable length is 10,300 km. 22 11

FALCON 23 Asynchronous Transmission This is an extreme case in which the transmitter and receiver clocks do not coordinate with each other except to set their circuitry to run at the same frequency. 24 12

Clock Drift between TX and RX 25 Reset RX Clock After Idle 26 13

Asynchronous Transmission Disadvantages: Works only for short distance communication systems, as different temperature/humidity/etc increase clock drift significantly. Only low data rate is possible (wider bits are more resilient to clock drifts). Can send only in short bursts (8-10 bits) to minimize the possible effects of drift before the next clock reset. Advantages: Simple to build. Inexpensive. 27 Plesiochronous Transmission To allow larger chunks of bits to be transmitted in higher data rate networks, the clocks of the transmitter and receiver must be continuously synchronized. This is done in plesiochronous transmission using special bit-encoding schemes that carry clock information along with bit information (called self-synchronizing codes). 28 14

Buffering At High Data Rate Transmitter #1 Receiver #1 Transmitter Clock, f1 PLL Transmitter #2 Receiver #2 TDM Multiplexer Transmitter Clock, f2 PLL Transmitter #3 Receiver #3 Transmitter Clock, f3 PLL 29 Synchronous Transmission In this case, the clocks of the transmitter and receiver (and all other devices in the network) are controlled by a main clock. A special Distributed Clock Synchronization Protocol is used by the network. An example is SDH/SONET systems. High data rate possible, minimum buffering, flexible multiplexing, but expensive. 30 15