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Communications Engineering: Essentials for Computer Scientists and Electrical Engineers

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Prefacep. vii
An Overview of Computer Communicationsp. 1
Further Readingp. 3
Signal Space Representationp. 5
The Vector Spacep. 6
The Signal Spacep. 7
Summaryp. 14
Further Readingp. 15
Exercisesp. 15
Fourier Representations of Signalsp. 17
The Fourier Seriesp. 20
Cosine-only Expansion of Fourier Seriesp. 33
Fourier Series in Complex Exponentialsp. 37
The Fourier Transformp. 48
Physical Meaning of Fourier Transformp. 54
Properties of the Fourier Transformp. 56
Fourier Transform Representations for Periodic Signalsp. 64
The Discrete Fourier Transformp. 68
The Inverse Discrete Fourier Transformp. 77
Physical Meaning of the Discrete Fourier Transformp. 78
Further Readingp. 92
Exercisesp. 92
Analog Modulation Techniquesp. 97
Amplitude Modulationp. 98
Double-sideband Suppressed Carrier (DSB-SC)p. 107
Single-sideband (SSB) Modulationp. 111
Frequency Modulation (FM)p. 119
Superheterodyne AM and FM Receiversp. 127
Analog Modulation with Frequency Division Multiplexingp. 131
Concluding Remarksp. 132
Further Readingp. 133
Exercisesp. 133
Digital Modulation Techniquesp. 135
Baseband Pulse Transmissionp. 136
Amplitude-shift Keying (ASK)p. 141
Binary Phase-shift Keying (BPSK)p. 146
Binary Frequency-shift Keying (FSK)p. 151
Quadriphase-shift Keying (QPSK)p. 157
Quadrature Amplitude Modulationp. 165
Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM)p. 169
OFDM in Wireless Local Area Networksp. 181
Digital Audio Broadcast Using OFDM and TDMAp. 183
The Role of Inner Product in Digital Modulationp. 185
Review of Digital Modulation Techniquesp. 186
Further Readingp. 187
Exercisesp. 187
Multiple-access Communicationsp. 189
Frequency-division Multiple Access (FDMA)p. 190
Time-division Multiple Access (TDMA)p. 192
Code-division Multiple Access (CDMA)p. 196
Carrier-sense Multiple Access (CSMA)p. 204
The Multiplexing Transmission Problemp. 205
Further Readingp. 206
Exercisesp. 206
Spread-spectrum Communicationsp. 209
The Basic Concept of Spread-spectrump. 209
Baseband Transmission for Direct-sequence Spread-spectrum (DSSS) Communicationsp. 212
BPSK Modulation for DSSSp. 218
Pseudo-random Binary Sequencep. 220
Frequency-hopping Spread-spectrump. 222
Application of Spread-spectrum Techniques to Multiple-access Systemsp. 224
Further Readingp. 230
Exercisesp. 230
Source Coding and Channel Codingp. 231
Average Codeword Length of Source Codingp. 233
Prefix Codesp. 234
Huffman Codingp. 235
Channel Codingp. 237
Error-correcting Capability and Hamming Distancep. 237
Hamming Codesp. 239
Convolutional Codesp. 243
Further Readingp. 250
Exercisesp. 250
Appendixp. 253
Bibliographyp. 255
Indexp. 257
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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Communications technologies increasingly pervade our everyday lives, yet the underlying principles are a mystery to most. Even among engineers and technicians, understanding of this complex subject remains limited. However, there is undeniably a growing need for all technology disciplines to gain intimate awareness of how their fields are affected by a more densely networked world.The computer science field in particular is profoundly affected by the growing dominance of communications, and computer scientists must increasingly engage with electrical engineering concepts. Yet communications technology is often perceived as a challenging subject with a steep learning curve.To address this need, the authors have transformed classroom-tested materials into this accessible textbook to give readers an intimate understanding of fundamental communications concepts. Readers are introduced to the key essentials, and each selected topic is discussed in detail to promote mastery. Engineers and computer scientists will gain an understanding of concepts that can be readily applied to their respective fields, as well as provide the foundation for more advanced study of communications. Provides a thorough grounding in the basics by focusing on select key concepts Clarifies comprehension of the subject via detailed explanation and illustration Helps develop an intuitive sense of both digital and analog principles Introduces key broadcasting, wireless and wired systems Helps bridge the knowledge gap between software and electrical engineering Requires only basic calculus and trigonometry skills Classroom tested in undergraduate CS and EE programsCommunications Engineering by Lee, Chiu, and Lin will give advanced undergraduates in computer science and beginning students of electrical engineering a rounded understanding of communications technologies. The book also serves as a key introduction to specialists in industry, or anyone who desires a working understanding of communications technologies.

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