Difference between revisions of "Communications IV"
(→Podcasts) |
(→Podcasts) |
||
Line 69: | Line 69: | ||
* [[Comms IV 2009 Podcasts]] | * [[Comms IV 2009 Podcasts]] | ||
* [[Comms IV 2012 Podcasts]] | * [[Comms IV 2012 Podcasts]] | ||
− | * Comms IV | + | * [[Comms IV 2013 Podcasts]] |
==Past Exams== | ==Past Exams== |
Revision as of 13:54, 4 June 2014
This is Derek Abbott's wiki project page for the 4063 Communications/7080 Principles of Communication Systems (3210 Combined) course. All information regarding this course can be found here.
Contents
Introduction
All the Comms IV materials and downloads are on this page. There are no rules. Anyone can edit this page and add questions and discussion. It is self-moderating and you can delete and edit anything you like. To resolve conflicts use the discussion page. I encourage you to use this as a forum to ask technical questions and even give answers if you know them. If you come across your own hints and tips that you think are useful to others, feel free to add them.
Schedule
For Semester 1, 2014, there will be four 1-hr slots per week:
- Wednesday 4 pm, Law lecture Theatre 1, (Room 231, Level 2, Ligertwood Building) - 2 hour session
- Friday 10am, Law lecture Theatre 2 (Room, 333, Level 3, Lidgertwood Annex) - 2 hour session
We will meet during all four slots and will have four lectures per week. One slot will sometimes be a tutorial.
This will be announced the week before. In total there will be 6 tutorials and 30 set lectures. We will probably have extra lectures on top of that for revision and worked examples, if needed.
Course Notes
You must bring hard copies of the notes to every lecture and annotate the notes, based on my lecture in order to make the most of attendance. It is cheaper to buy the notes from EESAU, however if you miss out you can download them from here:
Tutorials
You must download these tutorials and attempt them 1-week before the tutorial to get the most out of it. Each tutorial date will be announced a week in advance. Note that tutorial solutions are not given out, so need to attend the tutorials.
- Tutorial 1 Do after lecture at end of Section 2.
- Tutorial 2 Do after lecture at end of Section 4.
- Tutorial 3 Do after lecture at end of Slide 18 of Section 7.
- Tutorial 4 Do after lecture at end of Section 9.
- Optical Tutorial 1
- Optical Tutorial 2
Assignment
There will be one Matlab based assignment that will count towards 30% of the course (the exam will count as 70%).
Exercises
There are exercises on the lecture slides at the end of each section. You are expected to do these promptly in your own time as a means of helping you to absorb the material. These are not assessed. The solutions are given below. It is upto you you whether you wish to peek before attempting them or not. Do whatever works best for your teaching yourself. Note that exercises begin at Section 2 and carry through to Section 9.
- Solutions for Section 2
- Solutions for Section 3
- Solutions for Section 4
- Solutions for Section 5
- Solutions for Section 6
- Solutions for Section 7
- Solutions for Section 8
- Solutions for Section 9
Formula Sheets
Familiarize yourselves with these as you get them as handouts in the exams:
- Tables of Fourier Transforms
- Q Function Tables
- Trigonometric Relations
- Useful Comms Formulae
- Useful Opt. Comms. Formulae
The following formula sheet is designed for the whole BEng degree and is not given at exams. However it is very useful for solving problems for all courses in the degree for all 4 years. It is also useful if you carry on with a PhD.
Questions
If you found something confusing in a Comms IV lecture and thought it was a rather "muddy point" then on the list page, below, go ahead and ask a question. Anyone can answer: either myself or any other student can answer. I will of course tweek everyone's answers to make them clear and check they are correct.
Podcasts
- Comms IV 2007 Podcasts
- Comms IV 2008 Podcasts
- Comms IV 2009 Podcasts
- Comms IV 2012 Podcasts
- Comms IV 2013 Podcasts
Past Exams
- 1998 Exam
- 1999 Exam
- 2000 Exam
- 2001 Exam - unvailable
- 2002 Exam - unavailble
- 2003 Exam
- 2004 Exam
- 2005 Exam
- 2006 Exam
- 2007 Exam
- 2008 Exam
- 2009 Exam
- 2010 Exam
- 2011 Exam
- 2012 Exam
- 2013 Exam - you wish :-)
How to pass an exam
The trick with passing my exams is to note that I am more interested in your discussion and working than the final numerical answer. I like to see that you have understood the intuition of the problem and that you understand where the assumsptions are. I don't really care that much if you make a numerical error. If you think your final answer has an unphysical value of the wrong order of magnitude, just explain in your script why you think the number us out and that'll show me you are thinking critically. It is the critical thinking I care about. To see what I consider a "model" way of answering exam questions, see here:
Course Texts
The the cooms part, mandatory text is Proakis & Salehi. The recommended extra reference is Ziemer & Tranter.
- Proakis & Salehi: "Communication Systems Engineering" 2nd Ed (Prentice Hall)
- Ziemer & Tranter: "Principles of Communications" 5th Ed (Wiley)
For the optical comms part, the mandatory text is by Palais:
These are the two Bibles in the field and are worth getting if you see your career in photonic aspects of electrical engineering:
- Salen & Teich: Fundamentals of Photonics 2nd Ed (Wiley-Interscience)
- Born and Wolf: Principles of Optics (Cambridge University Press)
Optional reading for reference:
Your Lecturers
- Prof Derek Abbott (main lecturer)
- A/Prof Bruce R. Davis (possible guest lecturer)
- Dr James M. Chappell (possible guest lecturer)
- Dr Mark McDonnell (possible guest lecturer)
- Dr Withawat Withayachumnankul (possible guest lecturer)
- Dr Azhar Iqbal (possible guest lecturer)
- Pouria Yaghmaee (tutor)
- Ian Mathews (marker)
Lecture Slides
- Section 0: Overview Lecture
- Section 1: Introduction Lecture
- Section 2: Frequency domain analysis
- Section 3: Analog Modulation Systems
- Section 4: Random processes and linear systems
- Section 5: Effect of Noise on Analog Systems
- Section 6: Information Theory
- Section 7: Digital Modulation Systems
- Section 8: Digital Transmission in Bandlimited Channels
- Section 9: Channel Capacity and Coding
External Links
- Completing the square at Wikipedia
- Java Applet illustrating negative frequency
- Convolution animation
- Essential coding theory at MIT
- Information theory at Wikipedia
- Modulation at Wikipedia
- Map of the world showing TV formats
- Conditional probability
- Online optical dictionary
- Optics.org
- Online optics textbook
- Useful optics links
- Java applets for optics