COMPUTER NETWORK 计算机网络(英语论文).doc

上传人:laozhun 文档编号:2388849 上传时间:2023-02-17 格式:DOC 页数:31 大小:217KB
返回 下载 相关 举报
COMPUTER NETWORK 计算机网络(英语论文).doc_第1页
第1页 / 共31页
COMPUTER NETWORK 计算机网络(英语论文).doc_第2页
第2页 / 共31页
COMPUTER NETWORK 计算机网络(英语论文).doc_第3页
第3页 / 共31页
COMPUTER NETWORK 计算机网络(英语论文).doc_第4页
第4页 / 共31页
COMPUTER NETWORK 计算机网络(英语论文).doc_第5页
第5页 / 共31页
点击查看更多>>
资源描述

《COMPUTER NETWORK 计算机网络(英语论文).doc》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《COMPUTER NETWORK 计算机网络(英语论文).doc(31页珍藏版)》请在三一办公上搜索。

1、计算机网络(双语)论文作 者: 学 号: 院 系: 自动化工程学院专 业: 测控技术与仪器082题 目: COMPUTER NETWORK指导者: 评阅者: CataloguePreface3Basics5l Ultra-High-frequency communication (100 MHz)5l Home networking (LAN)6l Internet access (broadband over powerlines)8l Medium frequency (kHz)10l Low-speednarrow-band communication11l High-speed nar

2、row-band powerline communication distribution line carrier13l Transmitting radio programs14l Utility applications15l Low frequency (kHz)16l Broadband over power line (BPL)17l notching out and dynamic adaptation to contention18l Interference issue remains a challenge to PLC systems19l Automotive uses

3、21l Failure Scenarios21l IEEE P1901, ITU G.hn home grids22l Standards organizations24Small and medium-sized enterprise office LAN construction scheme25Personal feeling30Reference directory32PrefaceThis article is now in its fourth edition. Each edition has corresponded to a different phase in the wa

4、y computer networks were used. When the first edition appeared in 1980, networks were an academic curiosity. When the second edition appeared in 1988, networks were used by universities and large businesses. When the third edition appeared in 1996, computer networks, especially the Internet, had bec

5、ome a daily reality for millions of people. The new item in the fourth edition is the rapid growth of wireless networking in many forms. The networking picture has changed radically since the third edition. In the mid-1990s, numerous kinds of LANs and WANs existed, along with multiple protocol stack

6、s. By 2003, the only wired LAN in widespread use was Ethernet, and virtually all WANs were on the Internet. Accordingly, a large amount of material about these older networks has been removed. However, new developments are also plentiful. The most important is the huge increase in wireless networks,

7、 including 802.11, wireless local loops, 2G and 3G cellular networks, Bluetooth, WAP, i-mode, and others. Accordingly, a large amount of material has been added on wireless networks. Another newly-important topic is security, so a whole chapter on it has been added. Many people helped me during the

8、course of the fourth edition. I would especially like to thank the following people: Ross Anderson, Elizabeth Belding-Royer, Steve Bellovin, Chatschik Bisdikian, Kees Bot, Scott Bradner, Jennifer Bray, Pat Cain, Ed Felten, Warwick Ford, Kevin Fu, Ron Fulle, Jim Geier, Mario Gerla, Natalie Giroux, St

9、eve Hanna, Jeff Hayes, Amir Herzberg, Philip Homburg, Philipp Hoschka, David Green, Bart Jacobs, Frans Kaashoek, Steve Kent, Roger Kermode, Robert Kinicki, Shay Kutten, Rob Lanphier, Marcus Leech, Tom Maufer, Brent Miller, Shivakant Mishra, Thomas Nadeau, Shlomo Ovadia, Kaveh Pahlavan, Radia Perlman

10、, Guillaume Pierre, Wayne Pleasant, Patrick Powell, Thomas Robertazzi, Medy Sanadidi, Christian Schmutzer, Henning Schulzrinne, Paul Sevinc, Mihail Sichitiu, Bernard Sklar, Ed Skoudis, Bob Strader, George Swallow, George Thiruvathukal, Peter Tomsu, Patrick Verkaik, Dave Vittali, Spyros Voulgaris, Ja

11、n-Mark Wams, Ruediger Weis, Bert Wijnen, Joseph Wilkes, Leendert van Doorn, and Maarten van Steen. Special thanks go to Trudy Levine for proving that grandmothers can do a fine job of reviewing technical material. Shivakant Mishra thought of many challenging end-of-chapter problems. Andy Dornan sugg

12、ested additional readings for Chap. 9. Jan Looyen provided essential hardware at a critical moment. Dr. F. de Nies did an expert cut-and-paste job right when it was needed. My editor at Prentice Hall, Mary Franz, provided me with more reading material than I had consumed in the previous 7 years and

13、was helpful in numerous other ways as well. Finally, we come to the most important people: Suzanne, Barbara, and Marvin. To Suzanne for her love, patience, and picnic lunches. To Barbara and Marvin for being fun and cheery all the time (except when complaining about awful college textbooks, thus kee

14、ping me on my toes). BasicsAll power line communications systems operate by impressing a modulated carrier signal on the wiring system. Different types of powerline communications use different frequency bands, depending on the signal transmission characteristics of the power wiring used. Since the

15、power wiring system was originally intended for transmission of AC power, in conventional use, the power wire circuits have only a limited ability to carry higher frequencies. The propagation problem is a limiting factor for each type of power line communications. A new discovery called E-Line that

16、allows a single power conductor on an overhead power line to operate as a waveguide to provide low attenuation propagation of RF through microwave energy lines while providing information rate of multiple Gbps is an exception to this limitation.Data rates over a power line communication system vary

17、widely. Low-frequency (about 100-200kHz) carriers impressed on high-voltage transmission lines may carry one or two analog voice circuits, or telemetry and control circuits with an equivalent data rate of a few hundred bits per second; however, these circuits may be many miles long. Higher data rate

18、s generally imply shorter ranges; a local area network operating at millions of bits per second may only cover one floor of an office building, but eliminates installation of dedicated network cabling.Ultra-High-frequency communication (100 MHz)The highest information rate transmissions over power l

19、ine use RF through microwave frequencies transmitted via a transverse mode surface wave propagation mechanism that requires only a single conductor (US patent 7,567,154). An implementation of this technology called E-Line has been demonstrated using a single power line conductor. These systems have

20、demonstrated symmetric and full duplex communication well in excess of 1 Gbit/s in each direction. Multiple WiFi channels with simultaneous analog television in the 2.4 and 5.3 GHz unlicensed bands have been demonstrated operating over a single medium voltage line conductor. Because the underlying p

21、ropagation mode is extremely broadband, it can operate anywhere in the 20MHz - 20GHz region. Also since it is not restricted to 80 MHz, as is the case for high-frequency BPL, these systems can avoid the need to share spectrum with other licensed or unlicensed services and can completely avoid the in

22、terference issues associated with use of shared spectrum while offering complete flexibility for modulation and protocols of a RF-microwave system.High frequency communication may (re)use large portions of the radio spectrum for communication, or may use select (narrow) band(s), depending on the tec

23、hnologyHome networking (LAN)A LAN is a system of computers and associated peripherals such as Printers that are physically connected by cable within a limited geographical area-typically in an office building or on a college campus. The topology of the network may be ring, star or bus. LANs use fibe

24、r optics or coaxial cable to connect computers, and each computer must have special communications software installed oil its hard disk. Software has been developed that allows computers with different platforms to coexist and exchange data on the same LAN. Power line communications can also be used

25、 in a home to interconnect home computers (and networked peripherals), as well as any home entertainment devices (including TVs, Blu-ray players, game consoles and Internet video boxes such as Apple TV, Roku, Kodak Theatre, etc.) that have an Ethernet port. Consumers can buy powerline adapter sets a

26、t most electronics retailers and use those to establish a wired connection using the existing electrical wiring in the home. The powerline adapters plug into a wall outlet (or into an extension cord or power strip, but not into any unit with surge suppression and filtering, as this may defeat the si

27、gnal) and then are connected via CAT5 to the homes router. Then, a second (or third, fourth, fifth) adapter(s) can be plugged in at any other outlet to give instant networking and Internet access to an Ethernet-equipped Blu-ray player, a game console (PS3, Xbox 360, etc.) a laptop or an Internet TV

28、(also called OTT for Over-the-Top video) box that can access and stream video content to the TV.The most established and widely deployed powerline networking standard for these powerline adapter products is from the HomePlug Powerline Alliance. HomePlug AV is the most current of the HomePlug specifi

29、cations (HomePlug 1.0, HomePlug AV and the new HomePlug Green PHY for smart grid comprise the set of published specifications) and it has been adopted by the IEEE P1901 group as a baseline technology for their standard, due to be published and ratified in September or October of 2010. HomePlug estim

30、ates that over 45 million HomePlug devices have been deployed worldwide. Other companies and organizations back different specifications for power line home networking and these include the Universal Powerline Association, the HD-PLC Alliance and the ITU-Ts G.hn specification.Internet access (broadb

31、and over powerlines)Broadband over power lines (BPL), also known as power-line Internet or powerband, is the use of PLC technology to provide broadband Internet access through ordinary power lines. A computer (or any other device) would need only to plug a BPL modem into any outlet in an equipped bu

32、ilding to have high-speed Internet access. International Broadband Electric Communications or IBEC and other companies currently offer BPL service to several electric cooperatives.BPL may offer benefits over regular cable or DSL connections: the extensive infrastructure already available appears to

33、allow people in remote locations to access the Internet with relatively little equipment investment by the utility. Also, such ubiquitous availability would make it much easier for other electronics, such as televisions or sound systems, to hook up. Cost of running wires such as ethernet in many bui

34、ldings can be prohibitive; Relying on wireless has a number of predictable problems including security, limited maximum throughput and inability to power devices efficiently.But variations in the physical characteristics of the electricity network and the current lack of IEEE standards mean that pro

35、visioning of the service is far from being a standard, repeatable process. And, the amount of bandwidth a BPL system can provide compared to cable and wireless is in question. The prospect of BPL could motivate DSL and cable operators to more quickly serve rural communities. 1PLC modems transmit in

36、medium and high frequency (1.6 to 80 MHz electric carrier). The asymmetric speed in the modem is generally from 256 kbit/s to 2.7 Mbit/s. In the repeater situated in the meter room the speed is up to 45 Mbit/s and can be connected to 256 PLC modems. In the medium voltage stations, the speed from the

37、 head ends to the Internet is up to 135 Mbit/s. To connect to the Internet, utilities can use optical fiber backbone or wireless link.Deployment of BPL has illustrated a number of fundamental challenges, the primary one being that power lines are inherently a very noisy environment. Every time a dev

38、ice turns on or off, it introduces a pop or click into the line. Energy-saving devices often introduce noisy harmonics into the line. The system must be designed to deal with these natural signaling disruptions and work around them. For these reasons BPL can be thought of as a halfway between wirele

39、ss transmission (where likewise there is little control of the medium through which signals propagate) and wired transmission (but not requiring any new cables).Broadband over power lines has developed faster in Europe than in the United States due to a historical difference in power system design p

40、hilosophies. Power distribution uses step-down transformers to reduce the voltage for use by customers. But BPL signals cannot readily pass through transformers, as their high inductance makes them act as low-pass filters, blocking high-frequency signals. So, repeaters must be attached to the transf

41、ormers. In the U.S., it is common for a small transformer hung from a utility pole to service a single house or a small number of houses. In Europe, it is more common for a somewhat larger transformer to service 10 or 100 houses. For delivering power to customers, this difference in design makes lit

42、tle difference for power distribution. But for delivering BPL over the power grid in a typical U.S. city requires an order of magnitude more repeaters than in a comparable European city. On the other hand, since bandwidth to the transformer is limited, this can increase the speed at which each house

43、hold can connect, due to fewer people sharing the same line. One possible solution is to use BPL as the backhaul for wireless communications, for instance by hanging Wi-Fi access points or cellphone base stations on utility poles, thus allowing end-users within a certain range to connect with equipm

44、ent they already have.The second major issue is signal strength and operating frequency. The system is expected to use frequencies of 10 to 30 MHz, which has been used for many decades by amateur radio operators, as well as international shortwave broadcasters and a variety of communications systems

45、 (military, aeronautical, etc.). Power lines are unshielded and will act as antennas for the signals they carry, and have the potential to interfere with shortwave radio communications. Modern BPL systems use OFDM modulation, which allows them to mitigate interference with radio services by removing

46、 specific frequencies used. A 2001 joint study by the American Radio Relay League (ARRL) and HomePlug Powerline Alliance showed that for modems using this technique in general that with moderate separation of the antenna from the structure containing the HomePlug signal that interference was barely

47、perceptible at the notched frequencies and interference only happened when the antenna was physically close to the power lines (however other frequencies still suffer from interference).Medium frequency (kHz)Power line communications technology can use the household electrical power wiring as a tran

48、smission medium. This is a technique used in home automation for remote control of lighting and appliances without installation of additional control wiring.Typically home-control power line communication devices operate by modulating in a carrier wave of between 20 and 200 kHz into the household wiring at the transmitter. The carrier is modulated by digital s

展开阅读全文
相关资源
猜你喜欢
相关搜索
资源标签

当前位置:首页 > 建筑/施工/环境 > 项目建议


备案号:宁ICP备20000045号-2

经营许可证:宁B2-20210002

宁公网安备 64010402000987号