The Scientist and Engineer's Guide to Digital Signal Processing4
Telecommunications
Telecommunications is about transferring information from one location to
another. This includes many forms of information: telephone conversations,
television signals, computer files, and other types of data. To transfer the
information, you need a channel between the two locations. This may be
a wire pair, radio signal, optical fiber, etc. Telecommunications companies
receive payment for transferring their customer's information, while they
must pay to establish and maintain the channel. The financial bottom line
is simple: the more information they can pass through a single channel, the
more money they make. DSP has revolutionized the telecommunications
industry in many areas: signaling tone generation and detection, frequency
band shifting, filtering to remove power line hum, etc. Three specific
examples from the telephone network will be discussed here: multiplexing,
compression, and echo control.
Multiplexing
There are approximately one billion telephones in the world. At the press of
a few buttons, switching networks allow any one of these to be connected to
any other in only a few seconds. The immensity of this task is mind boggling!
Until the 1960s, a connection between two telephones required passing the
analog voice signals through mechanical switches and amplifiers. One
connection required one pair of wires. In comparison, DSP converts audio
signals into a stream of serial digital data. Since bits can be easily
intertwined and later separated, many telephone conversations can be
transmitted on a single channel. For example, a telephone standard known
as the T-carrier system can simultaneously transmit 24 voice signals. Each
voice signal is sampled 8000 times per second using an 8 bit companded
(logarithmic compressed) analog-to-digital conversion. This results in each
voice signal being represented as 64,000 bits/sec, and all 24 channels being
contained in 1.544 megabits/sec. This signal can be transmitted about 6000
feet using ordinary telephone lines of 22 gauge copper wire, a typical
interconnection distance. The financial advantage of digital transmission
is enormous. Wire and analog switches are expensive; digital logic gates
are cheap.
Compression
When a voice signal is digitized at 8000 samples/sec, most of the digital
information is redundant. That is, the information carried by any one
sample is largely duplicated by the neighboring samples. Dozens of DSP
algorithms have been developed to convert digitized voice signals into data
streams that require fewer bits/sec. These are called data compression
algorithms. Matching uncompression algorithms are used to restore the
signal to its original form. These algorithms vary in the amount of
compression achieved and the resulting sound quality. In general, reducing the
data rate from 64 kilobits/sec to 32 kilobits/sec results in no loss of sound
quality. When compressed to a data rate of 8 kilobits/sec, the sound is
noticeably affected, but still usable for long distance telephone networks.
The highest achievable compression is about 2 kilobits/sec, resulting in