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Using wire to transmit signals has been around since the telegram. However,
there are problems with this medium.
- A signal pair of wires can carry (send and receive) telephone conversation
for some distance but suffer from
- Electromagnetic interference (EMI) -- noise etc
- Crosstalk -- interference of the two signals.
- Twisted pairs -- Twist wires together
- reduces EMI and Crosstalk.
- Used in telephones.
- Can carry several simultaneous telephone conversations (100 voice
channels).
- Coaxial cables -- Place one wire inside another conductor separated by
an insulator.
- Superior rejection of EMI and Crosstalk.
- Can support 10,000 analog voice channels
- Fibre-optic cables -- one or more very thin (human hair thickness) glass
rods.
- Very little outside interference.
- Can carry very large amounts of data (several gigahertz)
- For example, laser light modulation carries data at 140 million bits per
second. Best telephone rates 56,000 bits per second.
Bandwidth
As we shall see later in the course, the modern forms of media (digital audio
and video, as well as fancy graphics) place a huge burden on the amount of data
needed to be transmitted around the Internet (World Wide Web).
Bandwidth is the amount of information or data that can be transmitted from one
end of the medium to the other (in exact terms the range of frequencies that can
be passed).
Clearly the design of the physical layer plays a fundamental role in the amount
and hence speed of data transmission.
We will look at implications of this much later in the course.
Next: Local Area (LAN) and
Up: Networks How
Previous: Network Topologies
Dave Marshall
9/28/2001