ECE 461 - Spring 2021
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About
Course description: Reliable communication of one bit of information over three types of channels: additive Gaussian noise, wireline, and wireless. Emphasis on the impact of bandwidth and power on the data rate and reliability, using discrete-time models. Technological examples used as case studies, like 2G, 3G, 4G and 5G.
Lectures: TR, 9.30am-10.50am,
via Zoom lectures (password is in Compass).
Lecture recordings available in Mediaspace channel
Instructor:
Prof. Juan Alvarez, alvarez@,
3046 Electrical & Computer Eng Bldg (ECEB), 300-5452.
Lecture Attendance
Policy: We invite relevant questions and comments during
lectures. Address your questions and comments to the entire class;
avoid disruptive behavior such as talking to neighbors, unless the
instructor invites you to form discussion groups. Kindly turn off or mute
cell phones, laptop computers, and other electronic devices during
lectures.
Course notes:
- Lecture Notes on Digital Communication, Viswanath: pdf. Hardcopy available from the ECE Copy Room.
- Supplemental notes:
- Fundamentals of Wireless Communication, Tse and Viswanath.
- Introduction to Communication Systems, Madhow.
- J. G. Proakis and M. Salehi, Fundamentals of Communication Systems, 2nd edition, Prentice-Hall, ISBN: 978-0133354850.
- B. P. Lathi and Z. Ding, Modern Digital and Analog Communication Systems, Fifth edition, Oxford University Press, ISBN: 978-0-19-068684-0.
Prerequisite: The basic prerequisites are a probability course (such as ECE 313 or STAT 410) and some basic signal processing background (such as ECE 210).
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Course Outline
Communication Systems are the basic workhorses behind the information
age. Examples include high speed communication networks, wireless and
wireline telephone systems, high speed modems, etc. The basic
currency of information is digital: bits . Broadly
speaking, this course is centered around a single theme:
reliably communicate bits over an unreliable physical
medium. The emphasis
is on how to transfer this currency between a
transmitter-receiver pair. The transfer involves a physical
medium, whose input-output characteristics are not deterministically
known. The curriculum has three broad parts:
- Channel Model : Even though the input-output relationship
of the physical medium is not deterministically known,
statistical quantities of this relationship, such as mean and
correlation, can be physically measured and are typically constant
over the time-scale of communication.
- Transmission and Reception Strategies : The statistical
model of the physical medium is then brought into bearing in the
engineering design of appropriate transmission and reception
strategies (modulation and demodulation, in the language of this
course).
- Design Resources and Performance : The resources available
to the communication engineer are power and
bandwidth . The final part of the course is to
relate the statistical performance of the communication strategies
to these two key resources.
These three parts are discussed in the course in the context of three
specific physical media:
- Additive white Gaussian noise channel: The received signal
is the transmit signal plus a statistically independent
signal. This is a basic
model that underlies the more complicated wireline and wireless
channels.
- Telephone channel: The received signal is the transmit
signal passed through a time-invariant, causal filter plus
statistically independent noise. Voiceband v.90 modem and DSL
technologies are used as examples.
- Wireless channel: The received signal is the transmit
signal passed through a time-varying filter plus statistically
independent noise. 2G, 3G, 4G and 5G standards are used as
examples.
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Office hours
Office hours (starting February 1 through May 10):
- Mondays, 4-5pm, Prof. Alvarez, via Zoom.
- Fridays, 4-5pm, Prof. Alvarez, via Zoom.