Bit Rate Baud Rate Number of Bits Per Second
Bit Rate Baud Rate Number of Bits Per Second
Bit Rate Baud Rate Number of Bits Per Second
Baud rate
Goal in data communication is to increase the
bit rate while decreasing the baud rate.
Increasing the data rate, increases the speed
of transmission.
Decreasing the baud rate decreases the
bandwidth requirement.
Bit Rate= Baud rate * Number of bits per second
Figure 5-1
Unipolar Encoding
Figure 5-5
RZ Encoding
Figure 5-8
Manchester and Diff. Manchester Encoding
Manchester encoding : the duration of bits is
divided into two halves. The voltage remains
at one level during the first half and moves to
the other level in the second bit.
A negative to positive transition represents
binary 1 and a positive to negative transition
represents binary 0.
Digital to Analog Conversion
5.15
Figure 5.1 Digital-to-analog conversion
5.16
Figure 5.2 Types of digital-to-analog conversion
5.17
Amplitude Shift Keying (ASK)
or
ON-OFF Keying (OOK)
5.18
Figure 5.3 Binary amplitude shift keying
BW= (fc-Nbaud/2)+(fc-Nbaud/2)
BW=(1+d) * Nbaud
Note: Minimum value of d=0 (factor related to the modulation process)
5.19
Figure 5.4 Implementation of binary ASK
5.20
Frequency Shift Keying
5.21
Figure 5.6 Binary frequency shift keying
BW= (fc1-fc0)+Nbaud
5.22
Phase Shift Keyeing
5.23
Figure 5.9 Binary phase shift keying
BW= (fc-Nbaud/2)+(fc-Nbaud/2)
BW=(1+d) * Nbaud
Note: Minimum value of d=0 (factor related to the modulation process)
5.24
Quadrature PSK
5.25
Figure 5.11 QPSK and its implementation
5.26
Note
5.27
Figure 8-1
Multiplexing vs. No Multiplexing
FDM