Skip to main content

Unit information: Communication Systems (M) in 2013/14

Please note: you are viewing unit and programme information for a past academic year. Please see the current academic year for up to date information.

Unit name Communication Systems (M)
Unit code EENGM2100
Credit points 10
Level of study M/7
Teaching block(s) Teaching Block 1 (weeks 1 - 12)
Unit director Professor. Doufexi
Open unit status Not open
Pre-requisites

EENGM0000

Co-requisites

None

School/department Department of Electrical & Electronic Engineering
Faculty Faculty of Engineering

Description including Unit Aims

The aim is to provide an insight into the choice of modulation techniques employed in both current and future generation wireless networks. Analytical tools for describing information transfer and uncertainty are discussed and applied to practical data and communication systems. The key parameters that govern transmission power and bandwidth of a communication network are introduced. The unit examines both analogue and digital modulation schemes, and coherent and non-coherent detection techniques.

Elements

Information Theory Dr R. Piechocki

  • The main concepts and results of information theory (essential for communicating in the presence of accidental or deliberate noise) are introduced.
  • Information and uncertainty; entropy and information capacity.
  • Noise-free discrete communications channel; optimal coding; rate of communication over a noisy discrete communications channel.

Communications Systems Performance Dr A. Doufexi

  • Analytical techniques are developed for calculating the performance of both analogue and digital modulation schemes in order to address the important issue of cost-performance trade-off, or "Quality of Service" (QoS).
  • QoS issues in wireless networks; review of noise in wireless communications; noise in AM systems; noise and threshold effects in FM systems.
  • Design goals for digital modulation techniques; correlation and matched filter detection of data; error probability of coherent reception techniques; error probability of M-ary and orthogonal systems.
  • Performance evaluation of DS-CDMA.

Intended Learning Outcomes

Students will have:-

  • A familiarity with the theoretical basis underlying all discrete communication systems
  • The fundamental skills to analyse modern communications networks.

Teaching Information

A combination of lectures and seminars

Assessment Information

  1. Matlab assignment - 10%
  2. Information Theory problem analysis - 10%
  3. 2 hour terminal exam - 80%

Reading and References

Information Theory

  • Jones, D.S., Elementary Information Theory, Clarendon Press, 1979, ISBN 0 1985 4375
  • Shannon, C.E. and W. Weaver, The Mathematical Theory of Communication, University of Illinois Press, 1963, ISBN 0 252 72548 4 (Q360 SHA)

Performance of Communications Systems

  • Haykin, S., Communications Systems, 3rd edition, J. Wiley, 1994, ISBN 0 4713 05847 (TK 5101 HAY)
  • Haykin, S. & Moher, M. Introduction to Analog and Digital Communications, 2nd edition 2007

Feedback