CHAPTER

10

Error-Control Coding

10.1  Introduction

In the previous three chapters we studied the important issue of data transmission over communication channels under three different channel-impairment scenarios:

  • In Chapter 7 the focus of attention was on the kind of channels where AWGN is the main source of channel impairment. An example of this first scenario is a satellite-communication channel.
  • In Chapter 8 the focus of attention was intersymbol interference as the main source of channel impairment. An example of this second scenario is the telephone channel.
  • Then, in Chapter 9 we focused on multipath as a source of channel impairment. An example for this third scenario is the wireless channel.

Although, indeed, these three scenarios are naturally quite different from each other, they do share a common practical shortcoming: reliability. This is where the need for error-control coding, the topic of this chapter, assumes paramount importance.

Given these physical realities, the task facing the designer of a digital communication system is that of providing a cost-effective facility for transmitting information from one end of the system at a rate and level of reliability and quality that are acceptable to a user at the other end.

From a communication theoretic perspective, the key system parameters available for achieving these practical requirements are limited to two:

  • transmitted signal power, and
  • channel bandwidth.

These two parameters, together with the power spectral ...

Get Digital Communication Systems now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.