MODULATION:
Usually, the signal that we want to transmit, say a speech signal with 4000 Hz frequency, will require a very big antenna. For any signal the frequency f is related to wavelength Las
c = L * f ………………………… (i)
Where c is velocity of light. And antenna length is generally taken as L/2 which simply means for our case antenna length is 75000 m, obviously this size of antenna is too big to use on day to day basis. That is why we take our speech signal or the desired signal and take another high frequency signal known as carrier (carrier can be any signal but should have high frequency and in practice we use a simple continuous wave signal), now we alter one or more parameters of this career signal in accordance with our desired signal, this parameters can be any one or combination of parameters. The basic parameters are amplitude, frequency, and phase of the signal. The result of this alteration we get is known as modulated signal, the desired signal which we wanted to transmit is known as modulating signal also known as base band signal and modulated signal is also known as band pass signal. The whole process is known as MODULATION.
There are many types of modulation starting from amplitude modulation popularly known as AM, frequency modulation (FM), QPSK, PCM, GMSK, QAM etc.
MULTIPLEXING:
Basically there are two types of system, time domain and frequency domain. In time domain we transmit frames, and in frequency domain we transmit in accordance with frequency. Now if there is more than one source of signal and we want to transmit them together then we implement multiplexing. In multiplexing we mix the source signals (off course with some precautions) say if we want to mix them in time domain then our frame will contain some packets form source A and some packets from source B and so on depending upon the constraints of the channel and time frame. The signals that source are generating can either be modulated signals or we can even send our multiplexed signal to the modulator and then modulate the signal. At the receiving end be demultiplex the signals. In multiplexing we do not provide a dedicated resource to a single source. I.e. we do not dedicate the complete time frame to a single source (in our case it is time frame). Multiplexing is also seen as you are travelling on a four lane road and suddenly it get narrower and turned to single lane, at this point the traffic police will allow one car from each lane to drive through that narrow single lane, this is what we called MULTIPLEXING.
MULTIPLE ACCESS:
As the name suggest, multiple access means multiple users can access the channel or link. Multiple access provides dedicated resources to the user (with a time constraint) in comparison to the multiplexing which does not provide any type of resources. There are many type of Multiple access schemes like FDMA frequency division multiple access, TDMA time division multiple access, CDMA code division multiple access, SDMA space division multiple access etc. take the example of FDMA, the whole frequency band is divided into small frequency bands called channels, now each channel is having certain capacity to take the traffic say a channel can accommodate single user at time, then the whole frequency bandwidth can be access by as many users as there are channels, mathematically if we are having a bandwidth of 200 KHz and channel bandwidth is 50 KHz then it means we can accommodate 4 users at a time by giving 50 KHz channel to each. This is so called multiple access, i.e. multiple users can access the bandwidth simultaneously and we do not require any additional hardware at the receiving end to separate the desired user from the other users as we do in Multiplexing. In reality the concept of Multiple Access is more complicated and In GSM each channel can accommodate 8 users at a time and each channel has 200 KHz bandwidth.
Even I am searching its answer. But, I feel, multiplexing is technique and multiple access is way to use this technique.
but there is a difference between multiple access and multiplexing that should be noted:
Multiple access refers to the remote sharing of a communication channel such as a satellite or radio channel by users in highly dispersed loctions. on the other hand, multiplexing refers to the sharing of a channel such as a telephone channel by users confined to a local site.
Modern telephone networks allow bandwidths in their channels that are much larger than those is needed for a digitalized telephone channel. Basically, a number of channels share a common transmission medium with the aim of reducing costs and complexity in the network. Multiplexing is defined as the process by which several signals from different channels share a channel with greater capacity. When the sharing is carried out with respect to a remote resource, such as a satellite, this is referred to as multiple access rather than multiplexing.
According to the definition described in Encyclopedia of Britinica : Multiplexing is defined as the sharing of a communications channel through local combining at a common point. In many cases, however, the communications channel must be efficiently shared among many users that are geographically distributed and that sporadically attempt to communicate at random points in time. Three schemes have been devised for efficient sharing of a single channel.
memory segmentation is the process of dividing the computer memory into different overlapping segments.
Frequency-division multiplexing, wavelength-division multiplexing, and time-division multiplexing.
Guard bands between channels
What is multiplexing and its diagram
Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing
Conversation Multiplexing Segmentation and Rassembly Error Checking
1. error control; 2. flow control; 3. segmentation and reassembly; 4. multiplexing; 5. connection setup.
see zyxo.wordpress.com/2010/07/17/the-difference-between-segmentation-and-clustering/ for a neat explanation.
memory segmentation is the process of dividing the computer memory into different overlapping segments.
Multiplexing-Combining all the inputs into one output. Switching-Taking one input to the output, at a time/frequency
Frequency-division multiplexing, wavelength-division multiplexing, and time-division multiplexing.
image segmentation refers to clustering or grouping of homogeneous pixels into various groups while classification is next hierarchy which labell those clustered pixels as different classes..
AM radio broadcasting uses frequency division multiplexing to allocate different frequencies to different radio stations. Cable television systems use frequency division multiplexing to transmit multiple channels simultaneously over a single cable. Cell phone networks use frequency division multiplexing to separate different users' calls on the same frequency band.
TDM
5 types of market segmentation include :- Behavioral Segmentation Psychological Segmentation Demographic Segmentation Geographic Segmentation Firmographic Segmentation
Multiplexing
Multiplexing