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Principles of Digital Communication
A Top-Down Approach
A comprehensive text that takes a unique top-down approach to teaching the fundamentals of digital communication for a one-semester course.
Bixio Rimoldi (Author)
9781107116450, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 21 January 2016
269 pages, 124 b/w illus. 1 table 128 exercises
25.3 x 18 x 1.8 cm, 0.76 kg
'The Rimoldi text is perfect for a beginning mezzanine-level course in digital communications. The logical three-layer - discrete-time, continuous-time, passband - approach to the problem of communication system design greatly enhances understanding. Numerous examples, problems, and MATLAB exercises make the book both student and instructor friendly. My discussions with the author about the book's development have convinced me that it's been a labor of love. The completed manuscript clearly bears this out.' Dan Costello, University of Notre Dame
This comprehensive and accessible text teaches the fundamentals of digital communication via a top-down-reversed approach, specifically formulated for a one-semester course. The unique approach focuses on the transmission problem and develops knowledge of receivers before transmitters. In doing so it cuts straight to the heart of the digital communication problem, enabling students to learn quickly, intuitively, and with minimal background knowledge. Beginning with the decision problem faced by a decoder and going on to cover receiver designs for different channels, hardware constraints, design trade-offs, convolutional coding, Viterbi decoding, and passband communication, detail is given on system-level design as well as practical applications in engineering. All of this is supported by numerous worked examples, homework problems, and MATLAB simulation exercises to aid self-study, providing a solid basis for students to specialize in the field of digital communication and making it suitable for both traditional and flipped classroom teaching.
1. Introduction and objectives
2. Receiver design for discrete-time observations: first layer
3. Receiver design for the continuous-time AWGN channel: second layer
4. Signal design trade-offs
5. Symbol-by-symbol on a pulse train: second layer revisited
6. Convolutional coding and Viterbi decoding: first layer revisited
7. Passband communication via up/down conversion: third layer.
Subject Areas: WAP [wireless technology TJKW], Satellite communication [TJKS], Communications engineering / telecommunications [TJK], Electronic devices & materials [TJFD], Electronics & communications engineering [TJ]