Signal transmission – Lucent Technologies MERLIN LEGEND 6 User Manual

Page 407

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MERLIN LEGEND Communications System Release 6.0
System Manager’s Guide

555-660-118

Issue 1

February 1998

About Telecommunications

Page B-9

Signaling

B

If the call was between switching offices, the two operators completed the steps of
the process.

Thus, the functions of signaling are:

Alerting for a request for service

Transmitting the address information (the telephone number) of the called
party.

Supervising the status of circuits and lines

Transmitting information such as dial tone to indicate service is available,
busy signal indicating that the called party is not available, and various
announcements

As switching systems were developed that automated much of the network’s
operation, an additional realm of signaling was required: machine-to-machine.

Because a primary objective of the telephone industry is for operation of the
telephone to be simple, universal, and practical, a relatively small number of
standard signals are required. On the other hand, since interoffice signaling is
between machines, the emphasis is on efficiency and flexibility rather than
usability. This has resulted in a large variety of signaling arrangements.

Signal Transmission

2

There are basically five types of signaling systems:

Direct current (dc)

Inband tone

Out-of-band tone

Digital

Common-channel interoffice

The signals for alerting and supervisory functions are generated by the flow (or
absence of flow) of the direct current between the telephones and the switching
office.

Address information is communicated either by interruptions in the direct current
produced by rotary-dial telephones, or by the unique tones produced by touch-
tone telephones. Information signals (dial tone, busy signal, and so on) are
provided by the transmission of certain combinations of tones. For touch-tone
telephone service, dual-tone multifrequency (DTMF) signaling is used.

The supervision of trunks between COs also occurs by the flow (or absence of
flow) of direct current. However, because long-distance trunks carry only

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