Radio Communication

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The key takeaways are that wireless communication transmits information using electromagnetic waves through open space. It discusses the history, elements, and basics of wireless communication systems including modulation and propagation of radio waves.

The different elements of a communication system are the information source, transmitter, channel, receiver, destination and noise. The transmitter converts information into signals and the receiver converts signals back into usable information.

The three modes of propagation of radio waves are surface mode for low frequencies, direct mode for high frequencies, and ionospheric mode for long distance high frequency waves.

Introduction to Wireless

Communication
ID
Contents
• History
• What is Communication System
• Elements of Communication System
• Block Diagram
• What is Wireless Communication?
• Types of Wireless Communication
• Electromagnetic Spectrum
• Carrier Waves
• Types of Electromagnetic Carrier Waves
• Wireless Application
• Advantage and Disadvantages of Wireless communication
• Frequency Channels with Example
• Radio Communication
• Radio Waves Generation, Propagation, Modulation, Interference and
Attenuatation.
History of Wireless Communication
• Guglielmo Marconi invented the wireless telegraph in 1896
– Communication by encoding alphanumeric characters in analog
signal
– Sent telegraphic signals across the Atlantic Ocean
• 1914 – first voice communication over radio waves
• Communications satellites launched in 1960s
• Advances in wireless technology
– Radio, television, mobile telephone, communication satellites
• More recently
– Satellite communications, wireless networking, cellular technology
Communication Systems
• Provide electronic exchange of multimedia data, Voice, data,
video, music, email, web pages, etc.
• Communication Systems of today Radio and TV
broadcasting, Public Switched Telephone Network (voice,
fax, modem)
– Cellular Phones
– Computer networks (LANs, WANs, and the Internet)
– Satellite systems (pagers, voice/data, movie broadcasts)
– Bluetooth
Elements of Communication System
 A communication system transmits, receives, and processes
information between two or more locations using electronic circuits.
• Source or Information
 Analog (analog voice, video signal)
 Digital (data)
• Transmitter
 A collection of electronic components and circuits designed to
convert the information into a signal suitable for transmission over a
given communication medium(Channel).
• Receiver
• Another collection of electronic components and circuits that accept
the transmitted message from the channel and convert it back into a
form understandable by humans.
Elements of Communication System

• Noise
 Any random, unwanted energy that enters the
communications system via the communications medium
and interferes with the transmitted signal.
• Channel/Medium
 It provides means of transporting signals from a
transmitter to a receiver
 Can be wired or wireless
Block Diagram of Communication System

Noise

Source
Transmitter Channel
Information

Destination Receiver
What is Wireless Communication ?

• Transmitting voice and data using electromagnetic


waves(Channel) in open space (atmosphere)
• Electromagnetic waves
• Travel at speed of light (c = 3x108 m/s)
• Has a frequency (f) and wavelength (l)
» c=fxl
• Higher frequency means higher energy photons
• The higher the energy photon the more penetrating is the
radiation
Types of Wireless Communication

Cellular Wireless computer network Radio


service
Electromagnetic Radiation Spectrum
Wavelength of Some Technologies
• GSM Phones:
– frequency ~= 900 Mhz
– wavelength ~= 33cm
• PCS Phones
– frequency ~= 1.8 Ghz
– wavelength ~= 17.5 cm
• Bluetooth:
– frequency ~= 2.4Gz
– wavelength ~= 12.5cm
Carrier Wave
• Wave usually carry energy without carrying
mass.
• Carrier waves carry Source information signal
over channel or transmitting medium.
• Electromagnetic waves are carrier waves
Types of Electromagnetic Carriers
• When the distance between the sender and receiver is
short (e.g. TV box and a remote control) infrared waves are
used
• For long range distances between sender and receiver (e.g.
TV broadcasting and cellular service) both microwaves and
radio waves are used
– Radio waves are ideal when large areas need to be coverd and
obstacles exist in the transmission path
– Microwaves are good when large areas need to be coverd and no
obstacles exist in the transmission path
Wireless applications (services)
Advantages and Disadvantages of Wireless
Wommunication
• Advantages:
– Mobility
– A wireless communication network is a solution in areas where
cables are impossible to install (e.g. hazardous areas, long distances
etc.)
– Easier to maintain
• Disadvantages:
– It has security vulnerabilities
– High costs for setting the infrastructure
– Unlike wired comm., wireless comm. is influenced by physical
obstructions, climatic conditions, interference from other wireless
devices
Frequency Carries/Channels
• The information from sender to receiver is carrier over a well
defined frequency band.
• This is called a channel
• Each channel has a fixed frequency bandwidth (in KHz) and
Capacity (bit-rate)
• Different frequency bands (channels) can be used to transmit
information in parallel and independently.
Example
 Assume a spectrum of 90KHz is allocated over a base frequency b
for communication between stations A and B
 Assume each channel occupies 30KHz.
 There are 3 channels
 Each channel is simplex (Transmission occurs in one way)
 For full duplex communication:
 Use two different channels (front and reverse channels)
 Use time division in a channel
Channel 1 (b - b+30)
Station A Channel 2 (b+30 - b+60) Station B

Channel 3 (b+60 - b+90)


Basics of Radio Communication
Radio waves generation
• when a high-frequency alternating current (AC) passes
through a copper conductor it generates radio waves which
are propagated into the air using an antenna

• radio waves have frequencies between:


– 3 Hz – 300 KHz - low frequency
– 300 KHz – 30 MHz – high frequency
– 30 MHz – 300 MHz – very high frequency
– 300 MHz – 300 GHz – ultra high frequency
Radio propagation
Radio propagation (2)

• radio waves are generated by an antenna and they


propagate in all directions as a straight line
• radio waves travel at a velocity of 186.000 miles per
second
• radio waves become weaker as they travel a long distance
Radio propagation (3)

• There are 3 modes of propagation:


– surface mode – for low frequency waves
– direct mode – for high frequency waves
– Ionospheric mode – long distance high frequency waves
Modulation

• modulation = adding information (e.g. voice) to a carrier


electromagnetic (radio) signal
Frequency Modulation (FM).
Amplitude Modulation (AM)
Radio frequency interference
Radio signal attenuation (path loss)
The End

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