WGU D413 TELECOMMUNICATION AND WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS EXAM
COMPLETE QUESTIONS AND 100% VERIFIED ANSWERS (PASS GUARANTEE)
1. What is telecommunications? The transmission of information over
significant distances using electronic means, including voice, data, video, and
other forms of communication.
2. What are the three basic components of a telecommunications system?
Transmitter, transmission medium, and receiver.
3. What is bandwidth? The range of frequencies that a communication channel
can carry, typically measured in Hertz (Hz), which determines the data
transmission capacity.
4. What is the difference between analog and digital signals? Analog signals
are continuous waveforms that vary smoothly, while digital signals are discrete
values represented by binary digits (0s and 1s).
5. What is modulation? The process of varying a carrier signal's properties
(amplitude, frequency, or phase) to encode information for transmission.
6. What are the three main types of modulation? Amplitude Modulation
(AM), Frequency Modulation (FM), and Phase Modulation (PM).
7. What is attenuation? The loss of signal strength as it travels through a
transmission medium, typically measured in decibels (dB).
8. What is noise in telecommunications? Unwanted electrical or
electromagnetic energy that interferes with the desired signal, degrading
communication quality.
9. What is the Shannon-Hartley theorem? A formula that determines the
maximum data rate of a communication channel: C = B log₂(1 + S/N), where C
is capacity, B is bandwidth, and S/N is signal-to-noise ratio.
10. What is the difference between simplex, half-duplex, and full-duplex
communication? Simplex allows one-way communication only, half-duplex
allows two-way communication but only one direction at a time, and full-duplex
allows simultaneous two-way communication.
,11. What is frequency? The number of complete wave cycles that occur in one
second, measured in Hertz (Hz).
12. What is wavelength? The physical distance between two consecutive
points of the same phase in a wave, inversely proportional to frequency.
13. What is the electromagnetic spectrum? The entire range of
electromagnetic radiation frequencies, from radio waves to gamma rays.
14. What is bit rate? The number of bits transmitted per unit of time, typically
measured in bits per second (bps).
15. What is baud rate? The number of signal changes or symbols transmitted
per second, which may differ from bit rate in multi-level signaling.
16. What is latency? The time delay between when data is sent and when it is
received, critical for real-time communications.
17. What is jitter? Variation in packet arrival times, which can affect quality in
real-time applications like VoIP and video conferencing.
18. What is the Nyquist theorem? States that the sampling rate must be at
least twice the highest frequency component to accurately reconstruct an analog
signal.
19. What is quantization? The process of converting continuous analog values
into discrete digital values during analog-to-digital conversion.
20. What is multiplexing? A technique that allows multiple signals to share a
single transmission medium simultaneously.
21. What are the main types of multiplexing? Frequency Division
Multiplexing (FDM), Time Division Multiplexing (TDM), Wavelength
Division Multiplexing (WDM), and Code Division Multiplexing (CDM).
22. What is FDM (Frequency Division Multiplexing)? A technique that
divides the available bandwidth into separate frequency channels, each carrying
a different signal.
23. What is TDM (Time Division Multiplexing)? A technique that divides
transmission time into slots, allocating each slot to different signals in rotation.
24. What is the difference between circuit switching and packet switching?
Circuit switching establishes a dedicated path for the entire communication
, session, while packet switching breaks data into packets that travel
independently through the network.
25. What is a protocol? A set of rules and standards that govern how data is
formatted, transmitted, and received in telecommunications.
26. What is the OSI model? A seven-layer conceptual framework that
standardizes communication functions: Physical, Data Link, Network,
Transport, Session, Presentation, and Application layers.
27. What is the TCP/IP model? A four-layer networking model: Network
Access, Internet, Transport, and Application layers, which is the foundation of
the Internet.
28. What is encoding? The process of converting data into a format suitable for
transmission over a communication channel.
29. What is Manchester encoding? A digital encoding technique where each
bit period is divided into two intervals, with a transition in the middle ensuring
clock synchronization.
30. What is a carrier wave? A high-frequency electromagnetic wave that is
modulated to carry information in analog transmission systems.
31. What is demodulation? The process of extracting the original information
signal from a modulated carrier wave at the receiver.
32. What is signal-to-noise ratio (SNR)? The ratio of signal power to noise
power, typically expressed in decibels, indicating signal quality.
33. What is crosstalk? Unwanted signal interference between adjacent
communication channels or transmission lines.
34. What is echo in telecommunications? The reflection of transmitted signals
back to the source, causing delayed repetition of the original signal.
35. What is a decibel (dB)? A logarithmic unit used to express the ratio
between two power levels, commonly used in telecommunications to measure
signal strength and loss.
36. What is propagation delay? The time required for a signal to travel from
source to destination through a transmission medium.
37. What is transmission rate? The speed at which data is transferred over a
communication channel, typically measured in bits per second.
COMPLETE QUESTIONS AND 100% VERIFIED ANSWERS (PASS GUARANTEE)
1. What is telecommunications? The transmission of information over
significant distances using electronic means, including voice, data, video, and
other forms of communication.
2. What are the three basic components of a telecommunications system?
Transmitter, transmission medium, and receiver.
3. What is bandwidth? The range of frequencies that a communication channel
can carry, typically measured in Hertz (Hz), which determines the data
transmission capacity.
4. What is the difference between analog and digital signals? Analog signals
are continuous waveforms that vary smoothly, while digital signals are discrete
values represented by binary digits (0s and 1s).
5. What is modulation? The process of varying a carrier signal's properties
(amplitude, frequency, or phase) to encode information for transmission.
6. What are the three main types of modulation? Amplitude Modulation
(AM), Frequency Modulation (FM), and Phase Modulation (PM).
7. What is attenuation? The loss of signal strength as it travels through a
transmission medium, typically measured in decibels (dB).
8. What is noise in telecommunications? Unwanted electrical or
electromagnetic energy that interferes with the desired signal, degrading
communication quality.
9. What is the Shannon-Hartley theorem? A formula that determines the
maximum data rate of a communication channel: C = B log₂(1 + S/N), where C
is capacity, B is bandwidth, and S/N is signal-to-noise ratio.
10. What is the difference between simplex, half-duplex, and full-duplex
communication? Simplex allows one-way communication only, half-duplex
allows two-way communication but only one direction at a time, and full-duplex
allows simultaneous two-way communication.
,11. What is frequency? The number of complete wave cycles that occur in one
second, measured in Hertz (Hz).
12. What is wavelength? The physical distance between two consecutive
points of the same phase in a wave, inversely proportional to frequency.
13. What is the electromagnetic spectrum? The entire range of
electromagnetic radiation frequencies, from radio waves to gamma rays.
14. What is bit rate? The number of bits transmitted per unit of time, typically
measured in bits per second (bps).
15. What is baud rate? The number of signal changes or symbols transmitted
per second, which may differ from bit rate in multi-level signaling.
16. What is latency? The time delay between when data is sent and when it is
received, critical for real-time communications.
17. What is jitter? Variation in packet arrival times, which can affect quality in
real-time applications like VoIP and video conferencing.
18. What is the Nyquist theorem? States that the sampling rate must be at
least twice the highest frequency component to accurately reconstruct an analog
signal.
19. What is quantization? The process of converting continuous analog values
into discrete digital values during analog-to-digital conversion.
20. What is multiplexing? A technique that allows multiple signals to share a
single transmission medium simultaneously.
21. What are the main types of multiplexing? Frequency Division
Multiplexing (FDM), Time Division Multiplexing (TDM), Wavelength
Division Multiplexing (WDM), and Code Division Multiplexing (CDM).
22. What is FDM (Frequency Division Multiplexing)? A technique that
divides the available bandwidth into separate frequency channels, each carrying
a different signal.
23. What is TDM (Time Division Multiplexing)? A technique that divides
transmission time into slots, allocating each slot to different signals in rotation.
24. What is the difference between circuit switching and packet switching?
Circuit switching establishes a dedicated path for the entire communication
, session, while packet switching breaks data into packets that travel
independently through the network.
25. What is a protocol? A set of rules and standards that govern how data is
formatted, transmitted, and received in telecommunications.
26. What is the OSI model? A seven-layer conceptual framework that
standardizes communication functions: Physical, Data Link, Network,
Transport, Session, Presentation, and Application layers.
27. What is the TCP/IP model? A four-layer networking model: Network
Access, Internet, Transport, and Application layers, which is the foundation of
the Internet.
28. What is encoding? The process of converting data into a format suitable for
transmission over a communication channel.
29. What is Manchester encoding? A digital encoding technique where each
bit period is divided into two intervals, with a transition in the middle ensuring
clock synchronization.
30. What is a carrier wave? A high-frequency electromagnetic wave that is
modulated to carry information in analog transmission systems.
31. What is demodulation? The process of extracting the original information
signal from a modulated carrier wave at the receiver.
32. What is signal-to-noise ratio (SNR)? The ratio of signal power to noise
power, typically expressed in decibels, indicating signal quality.
33. What is crosstalk? Unwanted signal interference between adjacent
communication channels or transmission lines.
34. What is echo in telecommunications? The reflection of transmitted signals
back to the source, causing delayed repetition of the original signal.
35. What is a decibel (dB)? A logarithmic unit used to express the ratio
between two power levels, commonly used in telecommunications to measure
signal strength and loss.
36. What is propagation delay? The time required for a signal to travel from
source to destination through a transmission medium.
37. What is transmission rate? The speed at which data is transferred over a
communication channel, typically measured in bits per second.