Analog & Digital Signals: Dept. of Computer Engineering Faculty of Engineering
Analog & Digital Signals: Dept. of Computer Engineering Faculty of Engineering
Analog & Digital Signals: Dept. of Computer Engineering Faculty of Engineering
Data can be
• Analog
• Digital
Periodic signal
Completes a pattern within a measurable time frame, called a period, and
Repeats that pattern over subsequent identical periods
Example:
Phase
Phase describes the position of the
waveform relative to time 0
Phase is measured in degrees or
radians [360° is 2π rad; 1° is 2π/360
rad, and 1 rad is 360/(2π)]
A phase shift of 360° corresponds to
a shift of a complete period;
A phase shift of 180° corresponds to
a shift of one-half of a period
A phase shift of 90° corresponds to Fig: Three sine waves with the same amplitude
a shift of one-quarter of a period and frequency, but different phases
Wavelength
Wavelength is another characteristic of a signal
traveling through a transmission medium
Wavelength binds the period or the frequency of a
simple sine wave to the propagation speed of the
medium
Time and Frequency Domains
Time-domain plot
Shows changes in signal amplitude with respect to time amplitude-
versus-time plot
Phase is not explicitly shown on a time-domain plot
Frequency-domain plot
To show the relationship between amplitude and frequency
Concerned with only the peak value and the frequency
Changes of amplitude during one period are not shown
Composite Signal
A single-frequency sine wave is not useful in data communications
Need to send a composite signal a signal made of many simple sine waves
According to Fourier analysis, any composite signal is a combination of simple
sine waves with different frequencies, amplitudes, and phases.
If the composite signal is periodic, the decomposition gives a series of signals
with discrete frequencies
If the composite signal is nonperiodic, the decomposition gives a combination of
sine waves with continuous frequencies
Periodic Composite Signal: can be decomposed into a number of
signals with discrete frequencies in the frequency domain
Fig: Attenuation
Decibel
To show that a signal has lost or gained strength, engineers use the
unit of the decibel.
The decibel (dB) measures the relative strengths of two signals or one
signal at two different points.
To find the theoretical bit rate limit, we need to know the ratio of the signal power to the
noise power. The signal-to-noise ratio is defined as
SNR is actually the ratio of what is wanted (signal) to what is not wanted (noise).
Because SNR is the ratio of two powers, it is often described in decibel units, SNR dB,
defined as
Example: The power of a signal is 10 mW and the power of the noise is 1 μW; what are the
values of SNR and SNRdB
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