Notes/UNB/Year 4/Semester 2/CS3873/2024-01-17.md
2024-01-22 10:12:48 -04:00

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Lecture Topic: Network Edge & Internet Access Technologies

Bandwidth and Data Rate recap: The data rate cannot exceed the capacity of the bandwidth of a given channel, this is where the formula R \leq B_w log_2(1+\frac{S}{N}) \triangleq C comes from

Doubling the data rate means that you need a bandwidth that has at least as much capacity to handle the new data rate

Internet Access Technologies:

  • DSL:
    • Using Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM) it caries digital data through phone lines
    • Example: Voice 0-4 kHz, Upstream 4-50 kHz, Downstream 50 kHz-1 MHz
  • Twisted Pair Cable Wire:
    • Constitute a fine antenna
    • Cancel out cross talk and produce less radiation
    • A number of pairs are bundled together in a cable
    • Used in telephone systems, unheralded twisted pair (UTP) for local area networks, computer networks within a building (Ethernet)
    • Data Rate: 10Mbps - 10Gbps
  • Cable:
    • Use cable TV companies existing cable infrastructure
    • Hybrid fibre coaxial (HFC) access network
      • Coaxial cables are shared to reach individual homes
      • Fibre optics connect neighbourhood level junctions to CMTS
      • Asymmetric 40Mbps - 1.2Gbps downstream, 30Mbps - 100Mbps upstream
    • Data/TV are transmitted at different frequencies over shared cable
    • At the home, splits the signals into TV and Internet signals
  • Coaxial Cable
    • More complex structure
    • Better performance
      • Excellent noise immunity because cable is very shielded
      • Can span longer distances
      • Bandwidth is close to 1 Ghz
      • Data rates are higher than other technologies, 100s Mbps per channel
  • Fibre to the home (FTTH)
    • Optical network terminal in individual homes (ONT)
    • Optical line terminal in central office (OLT)
    • Fibre optic cables are similar to coax cables (lots of layers)
      • Class core with higher index of refraction than the outer glass
      • Light propagates through glass core
      • Thin plastic jacket to protect glass cladding
      • Fibres are typically grouped in bundles protected by an outer sheath
      • The outer layer keeps the light inside, not leaking any energy by reflecting the signal off an outer sheath
    • Has a few excellent features:
      • Very low signal attenuation up to 100km
      • Immune to electromagnetic interference
      • Larger bandwidth, support data rate up to 10s or 100s of Gbps
      • Hard to tap

Network Core:

  • How is data moved through a network of links and packet switches?
  • There are two fundamental approaches
    • Circuit switching
    • Packet switching