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1.

List and briefly define important factors that can be used in evaluating or comparing the various digital-
to-digital encoding techniques.

- Signal Spectrum
- Clocking
- Error detection
- Signal interference
- Cost and complexity

2. Differential coding? (NRZI, Differential Manchester)
A communications format in which each bit is split into two, providing a self-synchronizing data
stream. A 1-bit is transmitted with a high voltage in the first period and a low voltage in the second,
with a 0-bit being the converse. One advantage of this encoding is that the difference between a 0-bit
and no signal is distinguished, as there is no transition in the latter case. A disadvantage is that it
occupies twice the bandwidth. Also called Manchester code, or Manchester encoding.

3. Explain the difference between NRZ-L and NRZI.
4. Describe two multilevel binary digital-to-digital encoding techniques.
- bipolar-AMI, pseudoternary
5. Define biphase encoding and describe two biphase encoding techniques.
- Manchester, differential Manchester







6. function of scrambling?
Sequences that would result in a constant voltage level on the line are replaced by filling sequences that
will provide sufficient transitions for the receivers clock to maintain synchronization. (B8ZS & HDB3)
- No dc component
- No long sequences of zero-level line signals
- No reduction in data rate
- Error-detection capability


7. What function does a modem perform?
- modulator/demodulator
- converts digital data to an analog signal so that it can be transmitted over an analog line

8. How are binary values represented in amplitude shift keying, and what is the limitation of this approach?
- represented by two different amplitudes of the carrier frequency
- frequency and phase remain constant
- susceptible to sudden gain changes


9. What is the difference between QPSK and offset QPSK?
- a delay of one bit time is introduced in the Q stream

10. QAM?
- combination of ASK and PSK
- possible to send two different signals simultaneously on the same carrier frequency, by using two
copies of the carrier frequency, one shifted by 90 with respect to the other
- each carrier is ASK modulated
11. What does the sampling theorem tell us concerning the rate of sampling required for an analog signal?
- sampling rate must be higher than twice the highest signal frequency

12. What are the differences among angle modulation, PM, and FM?
- FM = the frequency of the carrier signal is modulated to follow the changing voltage level
(amplitude) of the modulating signal. The peak amplitude and phase of the carrier signal remain
constant
- PM = phase of the carrier signal is modulated to follow the changing voltage level (amplitude) of the
modulating signal
Problems
Q3
What are the advantages/disadvantages of E-NRZ over NRZ-L?
Ad = reduces the dc component, error check
Dis = overhead (reduces the energy per data bit causing increased errors)
Q10


Extra
Bandwidth , data rate , BER
SNR , BER

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