Transcript IST 201
IST 201 Chapter 4 Waves • energy traveling from one place to another frequency • period – amount of time between each wave. measured in seconds. • frequency – number of waves(cycles) in a given amount of time (hertz). • amplitude – height of the wave. Measured in volts. • pulse – signal that is deliberately caused and involves a fixed, predictable duration. Types of Waves - Networking • • • • Voltage waves – copper Light waves – optical fiber Electromagnetic waves – wireless An electric motor completes 60 cycles every second. What is the frequency? What is the period? a. b. Frequency = 60 hertz Period = 1/60 Analog signals (sine waves) • Periodic (repeat same pattern at intervals) • continuously varying Square Waves • periodic • remain the same for some time; suddenly change; remain the same for some time; suddenly change back to original value. Decibels • A unit for expressing the ratio of two amounts of electric or acoustic signal power equal to 10 times the common logarithm of this ratio. • Two formulas for determining. Decibel Formula • Power formula: dB = 10 log10 (Pfinal/Pref) radio & light waves • • Pfinal = delivered power (watts) Pref = original power (watts) OR • Voltage formula: dB = 20 log10 (Vfinal/Vref) • • Vfinal = delivered voltage (volts) Vref = original voltage (volts) • Decibels are usually negative representing loss of power as the wave travels, but can be positive representing gain if signal is amplified. Oscilloscope • Device used to view electrical signals such as voltage waves & pulses. • Used as part of time-domain analysis • x-axis represents time • y-axis represents whatever is being measured Spectrum Analyzer • Device that creates graphs for signal analysis • x-axis represents frequency • y-axis represents whatever is being measured Noise • undesirable signals • can originate from natural or technological sources • added to data signals Sources of Noise • Nearby cables carrying data signals • Thermal noise – generated by thermal agitation of electrons in a conductor • RFI – from other signals being transmitted nearby • EMI – from nearby motors and lights • Laser noise at transmitter or receiver White Noise • Noise that affects all frequencies equally • All data transmissions affected on a LAN Narrowband Interference • Small range of frequencies affected • May affect only certain signals on a LAN Bandwidth • Analog – frequency range of a radio station or electronic amplifier • Units of measure • frequency • cycles per second • hertz Digital Bandwidth • Measures how much information can flow from one place to another in a given amount of time. • Unit of measure • bits per second • kbps • Mbps Electronic Signal • < 5 volts • Transmitting/receiving devices must be properly grounded so that the reference point for the signal is zero volts. Attenuation • Decrease in signal amplitude over the length of a link • Contributors to attenuation • Long cable runs • High signal frequencies • Resistance of copper cable converts some of the electrical signal into heat • Leaks through insulation • Defective connectors Jitter • Slight movement of a signal in time or phase that can introduce errors and loss of synchronization • Caused by: • long cable runs • high data rates Crosstalk • Transmission of signals from one wire pair to nearby pairs • Can be within the same cable or from a nearby cable (alien crosstalk) Types of Crosstalk • Near-end crosstalk (NEXT) • Far-end crosstalk (FEXT) • Power sum near-end crosstalk (PSNEXT) NEXT • • • • • • • Closest to the transmitter Check both ends of the cable #1 reason: Too much untwisting #2 reason: Split pairs Measured in decibels Larger the negative number, the lower the NEXT Displays on the tester as positive FEXT • Further away from the transmitter • Less noise than NEXT because of attenuation PSNEXT • Cumulative effects of NEXT on each wire pair by the other three wire pairs • Very important in Gigabit Ethernet where all pairs are used. ELFEXT • Equal level far end crosstalk measures FEXT between pairs • FEXT = 45 dB + Attenuation = 11 dB • ELFEXT = 45 - 11 = 34 dB This is the effect on the disturbing pair. This how much it affects the adjacent pair PSELFEXT • Power sum equal level far end crosstalk • Combined effect of ELFEXT of the three other wire pairs on each pair Insertion Loss • Combination of the effects of attenuation and resistance on the cable segment • Amount of energy lost as the signal reaches the end of the cable. • High frequency = greater resistance • Long cable runs • Poorly terminated connectors • Temperature absorption by some types of cable (usu. those with PVC) • Measured in decibels Propagation Delay • Measure of how long it takes a signal to travel from one end of the cable & back • Tested on a TDR • Time domain reflectometer • Length the signal travels is further than cable length (wires are twisted).