PORTALE DELLA DIDATTICA

PORTALE DELLA DIDATTICA

PORTALE DELLA DIDATTICA

Elenco notifiche



Optical communications and Wireless communications

03SOHBG

A.A. 2019/20

Course Language

Inglese

Degree programme(s)

Course structure
Teaching Hours
Lezioni 48
Esercitazioni in aula 12
Lecturers
Teacher Status SSD h.Les h.Ex h.Lab h.Tut Years teaching
Co-lectures
Espandi

Context
SSD CFU Activities Area context
2019/20
The goal of the course is to provide detailed knowledge about specific features, potential performance and design trade-offs of practical digital communication systems based on wireless and fiber-optic transmission. Wireless communications encompass mobile communications through single and multiple antenna devices (mobile phones, smartphones, tablets, etc), point-to-point radio links, and satellite communications (including direct-to-home TV broadcasting). Optical communications represent the worldwide ubiquitous cabled infrastructure of all of the global Internet, from data-centers and server farms, through cities, countries and continents, all the way to the end users’ homes or working places. The course is fully given in English, and it is based on two modules, indicated as "Optical Communications" and "Wireless Transmission" in the following
The goal of the course is to provide detailed knowledge about specific features, potential performance and design trade-offs of practical digital communication systems based on wireless and fiber-optic transmission. Wireless communications encompass mobile communications through single and multiple antenna devices (mobile phones, smartphones, tablets, etc), point-to-point radio links, and satellite communications (including direct-to-home TV broadcasting). Optical communications represent the worldwide ubiquitous cabled infrastructure of all of the global Internet, from data-centers and server farms, through cities, countries and continents, all the way to the end users’ homes or working places. The course is fully given in English, and it is based on two modules, indicated as "Optical Communications" and "Wireless Transmission" in the following
The student will acquire the knowledge of: • the wireless and optical systems main features, performance potential and impairments • the related transmitter and receiver technologies and algorithms needed to achieve reliable communication over the considered transmission medium, which is free space for wireless systems and the optical fiber for the optical systems The expected outcome of the course is the ability for the student to: • understand the design and optimization process of practical wireless transmitter and receiver systems • understand the design and optimization process of practical optical transmitter and receiver systems, as well as of the fiber plant connecting them • apply such design techniques and optimization processes autonomously to practical transmission system examples.
The student will acquire the knowledge of: • the wireless and optical systems main features, performance potential and impairments • the related transmitter and receiver technologies and algorithms needed to achieve reliable communication over the considered transmission medium, which is free space for wireless systems and the optical fiber for the optical systems The expected outcome of the course is the ability for the student to: • understand the design and optimization process of practical wireless transmitter and receiver systems • understand the design and optimization process of practical optical transmitter and receiver systems, as well as of the fiber plant connecting them • apply such design techniques and optimization processes autonomously to practical transmission system examples.
This course has the following mandatory prerequisites • a thorough understanding of the mathematical topics presented in the Bachelor (or "Laurea") degree, including calculus and linear algebra. • a sound and well-established prior knowledge of the fundamentals of signal theory (including probability and stochastic processes) and of basic digital communications (digital modulations and their performance on the AWGN channel).
This course has the following mandatory prerequisites • a thorough understanding of the mathematical topics presented in the Bachelor (or "Laurea") degree, including calculus and linear algebra. • a sound and well-established prior knowledge of the fundamentals of signal theory (including probability and stochastic processes) and of basic digital communications (digital modulations and their performance on the AWGN channel).
Wireless Systems (6 credits) • Review of basic concepts for digital communications: analytic signal representation, signal spaces, linear modulations for the AWGN channel, error probability, achievable rate (Shannon formula) • Characteristics of the wireless fading channel (Rayleigh/Rician fading models) • Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MIMO) communications • Channel estimation and equalization techniques for MIMO and SISO systems • Synchronization techniques. Frame, carrier and symbol timing recovery. • Effect of channel nonlinearities and countermeasures. • Advanced digital iterative receivers. Optical Systems (6 credits) • Introduction to optical communication systems – a historical perspective • Systems without optical amplifiers o the ideal on-off optical transmission systems, fundamental quantum limits o practical non-amplified systems: typical structure, PIN and APD photodetection, modeling and performance calculation o design of systems using non-amplified systems: short and medium-haul systems, access and last-mile systems o a short introduction to quantum-key-distribution (QKD) optical systems • Systems with optical amplifiers o the system-level modeling of the optical amplifier, quantum amplification noise (or ASE noise) o the performance of the single-optical-amplifier on-off keying system o the performance of the multi-span chained-amplifier on-off keying system o systems with coherent detection o generalities and description, block diagrams o ideal performance characterization o receiver DSP block diagrams and algorithms • Linear and non-linear propagation effects in the optical fiber o chromatic dispersion (linear effect) o the Kerr effect (non-linear effect) o modeling of the interaction of linear and non-linear effects o compensation of chromatic dispersion based on DSP o countermeasures against non-linear effects o modeling and evaluation of the impact on realistic systems of the fiber propagation effects • Optical Systems utilization scenarios and related design optimization: o multi-thousand km submarine systems o optically-routed national and international backbone networks o data-center networks o access networks (fiber-to-the-home, or FTTH)
Wireless Systems (6 credits) • Review of basic concepts for digital communications: analytic signal representation, signal spaces, linear modulations for the AWGN channel, error probability, achievable rate (Shannon formula) • Characteristics of the wireless fading channel (Rayleigh/Rician fading models) • Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MIMO) communications • Channel estimation and equalization techniques for MIMO and SISO systems • Synchronization techniques. Frame, carrier and symbol timing recovery. • Effect of channel nonlinearities and countermeasures. • Advanced digital iterative receivers. Optical Systems (6 credits) • Introduction to optical communication systems – a historical perspective • Systems without optical amplifiers o the ideal on-off optical transmission systems, fundamental quantum limits o practical non-amplified systems: typical structure, PIN and APD photodetection, modeling and performance calculation o design of systems using non-amplified systems: short and medium-haul systems, access and last-mile systems o a short introduction to quantum-key-distribution (QKD) optical systems • Systems with optical amplifiers o the system-level modeling of the optical amplifier, quantum amplification noise (or ASE noise) o the performance of the single-optical-amplifier on-off keying system o the performance of the multi-span chained-amplifier on-off keying system o systems with coherent detection o generalities and description, block diagrams o ideal performance characterization o receiver DSP block diagrams and algorithms • Linear and non-linear propagation effects in the optical fiber o chromatic dispersion (linear effect) o the Kerr effect (non-linear effect) o modeling of the interaction of linear and non-linear effects o compensation of chromatic dispersion based on DSP o countermeasures against non-linear effects o modeling and evaluation of the impact on realistic systems of the fiber propagation effects • Optical Systems utilization scenarios and related design optimization: o multi-thousand km submarine systems o optically-routed national and international backbone networks o data-center networks o access networks (fiber-to-the-home, or FTTH)
Lectures will encompass both theory and practical design problems, which are always related to real optical transmission systems with realistic parameters. These exercises will be solved in class.
Lectures will encompass both theory and practical design problems, which are always related to real optical transmission systems with realistic parameters. These exercises will be solved in class.
The optical system topics are fully covered by the material (handouts) provided by the teachers, both for the lectures and the design problems. All such material will be available on the website prior to classes. No specific extra material is needed. For personal further reading on Optical systems: • Optical Fiber Telecommunications Volume VIA and VIB: Systems and Networks (Optics and Photonics) by Kaminow, Ivan, Li, Tingye and Willner, Alan E., Academic Press; 6 edition (May 11, 2013). ASIN: B00CZANHGW • Xiang Zhou and Chongjin Xie, Enabling Technologies for High Spectral-efficiency Coherent Optical Communication Networks, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 2015. • D. Tse and P. Viswanath, Fundamentals of Wireless Communication. Cambridge University Press, 2005 • J.Proakis and M.Salehi, Digital Communications (5th ed). McGraw-Hill, 2008.
The optical system topics are fully covered by the material (handouts) provided by the teachers, both for the lectures and the design problems. All such material will be available on the website prior to classes. No specific extra material is needed. For personal further reading on Optical systems: • Optical Fiber Telecommunications Volume VIA and VIB: Systems and Networks (Optics and Photonics) by Kaminow, Ivan, Li, Tingye and Willner, Alan E., Academic Press; 6 edition (May 11, 2013). ASIN: B00CZANHGW • Xiang Zhou and Chongjin Xie, Enabling Technologies for High Spectral-efficiency Coherent Optical Communication Networks, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 2015. • D. Tse and P. Viswanath, Fundamentals of Wireless Communication. Cambridge University Press, 2005 • J.Proakis and M.Salehi, Digital Communications (5th ed). McGraw-Hill, 2008.
Modalità di esame: Prova scritta (in aula); Prova orale facoltativa;
Exam: Written test; Optional oral exam;
... The assessment of the student’s proficiency consists of a final written test. The written test consists of both theoretical questions and analysis/design problems that may require calculations. The written test grading criteria are as follows: 1) the ability to clearly describe the procedure used to solve the test problems 2) the ability to appropriately use technical language in the answers 3) the correctness of the answers provided The written exam proposes practical numerical exercises that allows to judge if the student knows the topic of the course and is able to apply this knowledge to solve some simplified design examples on modern optical transmission systems. The open questions allows to judge if the student has acquired the most relevant theoretical topics of the course. The written exam is two hours long and it is scored on a full scale up to 30. During the written exam, the students will be allowed to carry with them a pocket calculator, paper and pen and four (single-sided) pages of formulas written by themselves. No other material will be allowed (such as laptops, handouts, etc). For the Optical Communications part, a student that got more than 15 points in the written exam can ask for an optional oral exam, which can give a variation from -3 to + 3 points to the results of the written exam. The final grade will be the average of the two modules, i.e. round(0.5*(grade(Communication network)+grade(Digital transmission))
Gli studenti e le studentesse con disabilità o con Disturbi Specifici di Apprendimento (DSA), oltre alla segnalazione tramite procedura informatizzata, sono invitati a comunicare anche direttamente al/la docente titolare dell'insegnamento, con un preavviso non inferiore ad una settimana dall'avvio della sessione d'esame, gli strumenti compensativi concordati con l'Unità Special Needs, al fine di permettere al/la docente la declinazione più idonea in riferimento alla specifica tipologia di esame.
Exam: Written test; Optional oral exam;
The assessment of the student’s proficiency consists of a final written test. The written test consists of both theoretical questions and analysis/design problems that may require calculations. The written test grading criteria are as follows: 1) the ability to clearly describe the procedure used to solve the test problems 2) the ability to appropriately use technical language in the answers 3) the correctness of the answers provided The written exam proposes practical numerical exercises that allows to judge if the student knows the topic of the course and is able to apply this knowledge to solve some simplified design examples on modern optical transmission systems. The open questions allows to judge if the student has acquired the most relevant theoretical topics of the course. The written exam is two hours long and it is scored on a full scale up to 30. During the written exam, the students will be allowed to carry with them a pocket calculator, paper and pen and four (single-sided) pages of formulas written by themselves. No other material will be allowed (such as laptops, handouts, etc). For the Optical Communications part, a student that got more than 15 points in the written exam can ask for an optional oral exam, which can give a variation from -3 to + 3 points to the results of the written exam. The final grade will be the average of the two modules, i.e. round(0.5*(grade(Communication network)+grade(Digital transmission))
In addition to the message sent by the online system, students with disabilities or Specific Learning Disorders (SLD) are invited to directly inform the professor in charge of the course about the special arrangements for the exam that have been agreed with the Special Needs Unit. The professor has to be informed at least one week before the beginning of the examination session in order to provide students with the most suitable arrangements for each specific type of exam.
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