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multiplex

 
Dictionary: mul·ti·plex   (mŭl'tə-plĕks') pronunciation
adj.
  1. Relating to, having, or consisting of multiple elements or parts: "the whole complex and multiplex detail of the noble science of dinner" (Thomas Love Peacock).
  2. Relating to or being a system of simultaneous communication of two or more messages on the same wire or radio channel.
n.

A building, especially a movie theater or dwelling, with multiple separate units.


v., -plexed, -plex·ing, -plex·es.

v.intr.

To send messages or signals simultaneously using a multiplex system.

v.tr.

To send simultaneously using a multiplex system.

[Middle English, a multiple, from Latin, various, complicated : multi-, multi- + -plex, -fold.]


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Marketing Dictionary: multiplex
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System enabling the transmission or reception of several messages simultaneously on the same circuit. A multiplex transmission system is needed to transmit stereophonic broadcast signals. In order for these signals to be received in stereo, the receiver must also be a multiplex system.


Process of transmitting multiple (but separate) signals simultaneously over a single channel or line. Because the signals are sent in one complex transmission, the receiving end has to separate the individual signals. The two main types of multiplexing methods are time-division multiplexing (TDM) and frequency-division multiplexing (FDM). In TDM (typically used for digital signals) a device is given a specific time slot during which it can use the channel. In FDM (typically used for analog signals) the channel is subdivided into subchannels, each with a different frequency width that is assigned to a specific signal. Optical-fibre networks can use DWDM (dense wavelength-division multiplexing), in which different data signals are sent in different wavelengths of light in the fibre-optic medium.

For more information on multiplexing, visit Britannica.com.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: multiplexing
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multiplexing, in communication, technique whereby two or more independent messages, or information-bearing signals, are carried by a single common medium, or channel. When multiplexing is performed, two or more channels are combined into a single channel, or, in a process often called demultiplexing, a single channel is divided into several subchannels. Many different types of multiplexing are possible. One type is frequency-division multiplexing, in which a single frequency channel is subdivided into two or more subchannels, each of which can then carry a smaller range of frequencies than could the original channel. Frequency-division multiplexing is used in television broadcasting, when audio and video signals share a single channel; in stereophonic FM radio broadcasting, when two audio signals share a single channel; and in microwave transmission of long-distance telephone calls, when 60 or more conversations are carried by a single microwave beam. A second type of multiplexing is time-division multiplexing, in which successive small time intervals are used for the transmission of messages over a single channel. Time-division multiplexing is often used in the construction of digital computers. When information can be stored into or retrieved from the computer's memory at a much greater rate than it can be supplied or used by an external device such as a card reader, printer, or teletype terminal, several such low-speed devices can share a single multiplexed data channel.


Wikipedia: Multiplexing
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Multiplex
techniques
Circuit mode
(constant bandwidth)
TDM · FDM · WDM
Polarization multiplexing
Spatial multiplexing (MIMO)
Statistical multiplexing
(variable bandwidth)
Packet mode · Dynamic TDM
FHSS · DSSS · OFDMA
Related topics
Channel access methods
Media Access Control (MAC)

For other uses of multiplex, see multiplex (disambiguation).
For multiplexing in electronics and signal processing, see Multiplexer.

In telecommunications and computer networks, multiplexing (also known as muxing) is a process where multiple analog message signals or digital data streams are combined into one signal over a shared medium. The aim is to share an expensive resource. For example, in telecommunications, several phone calls may be transferred using one wire. It originated in telegraphy, and is now widely applied in communications.

The multiplexed signal is transmitted over a communication channel, which may be a physical transmission medium. The multiplexing divides the capacity of the low-level communication channel into several higher-level logical channels, one for each message signal or data stream to be transferred. A reverse process, known as demultiplexing, can extract the original channels on the receiver side.

A device that performs the multiplexing is called a multiplexer (MUX), and a device that performs the reverse process is called a demultiplexer (DEMUX).

Inverse multiplexing (IMUX) has the opposite aim as multiplexing, namely to break one data stream into several streams, transfer them simultaneously over several communication channels, and recreate the original data stream.

Contents

Categories

The two most basic forms of multiplexing are time-division multiplexing (TDM) and frequency-division multiplexing (FDM), both either in analog or digital form. FDM requires modulation of each signal.

In optical communications, FDM is referred to as wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM).

Variable bit rate digital bit streams may be transferred efficiently over a fixed bandwidth channel by means of statistical multiplexing, for example packet mode communication. Packet mode communication is an asynchronous mode time-domain multiplexing, which resembles, but should not be considered as, time-division multiplexing.

Digital bit streams can be transferred over an analog channel by means of code-division multiplexing (CDM) techniques such as frequency-hopping spread spectrum (FHSS) and direct-sequence spread spectrum (DSSS).

In wireless communications, multiplexing can also be accomplished through alternating polarization (horizontal/vertical or clockwise/counterclockwise) on each adjacent channel and satellite, or through phased multi-antenna array combined with a Multiple-input multiple-output communications (MIMO) scheme.

Telecommunication multiplexing

Relation to multiple access

A multiplexing technique may be further extended into a multiple access method or channel access method, for example TDM into Time-division multiple access (TDMA) and statistical multiplexing into carrier sense multiple access (CSMA). A multiple access method makes it possible for several transmitters connected to the same physical medium to share its capacity.

Multiplexing is provided by the Physical Layer of the OSI model, while multiple access also involves a media access control protocol, which is part of the Data Link Layer.

Application areas

Telegraphy

The earliest communication technology using electrical wires, and therefore sharing an interest in the economies afforded by multiplexing, was the electric telegraph. Early experiments allowed two separate messages to travel in opposite directions simultaneously, first using an electric battery at both ends, then at only one end.

Telephony

In telephony, a customer's telephone line now typically ends at the remote concentrator box down the street, where it is multiplexed along with other telephone lines for that neighborhood or other similar area. The multiplexed signal is then carried to the central switching office on significantly fewer wires and for much further distances than a customer's line can practically go. This is likewise also true for digital subscriber lines (DSL).

Fiber in the loop (FITL) is a common method of multiplexing, which uses optical fibre as the backbone. It not only connects POTS phone lines with the rest of the PSTN, but also replaces DSL by connecting directly to Ethernet wired into the home. Asynchronous Transfer Mode is often the communications protocol used.

Because all of the phone (and data) lines have been clumped together, none of them can be accessed except through a demultiplexer. This provides for more-secure communications, though they are not typically encrypted.

The concept is also now used in cable TV, which is increasingly offering the same services as telephone companies. IPTV also depends on multiplexing.

Video processing

In video editing and processing systems, multiplexing refers to the process of interleaving audio and video into one coherent transport stream (time-division multiplexing).

In digital video, such a transport stream is normally a feature of a container format which may include metadata and other information, such as subtitles. The audio and video streams may have variable bit rate. Software that produces such a transport stream and/or container is commonly called a statistical multiplexor or muxer. A demuxer is software that extracts or otherwise makes available for separate processing the components of such a stream or container.

Digital broadcasting

In digital television and digital radio systems, several variable bit-rate data streams are multiplexed together to a fixed bitrate transport stream by means of statistical multiplexing. This makes it possible to transfer several video and audio channels simultaneously over the same frequency channel, together with various services.

In the digital television systems, this may involve several standard definition television (SDTV) programmes (particularly on DVB-T, DVB-S2, ISDB and ATSC-C), or one HDTV, possibly with a single SDTV companion channel over one 6 to 8 MHz-wide TV channel. The device that accomplishes this is called a statistical multiplexer. In several of these systems, the multiplexing results in an MPEG transport stream. The newer DVB standards DVB-S2 and DVB-T2 has the capacity to carry several HDTV channels in one multiplex. Even the original DVB standards can carry more HDTV channels in a multiplex if the most advanced MPEG-4 compressions hardware is used.

On communications satellites which carry broadcast television networks and radio networks, this is known as multiple channel per carrier or MCPC. Where multiplexing is not practical (such as where there are different sources using a single transponder), single channel per carrier mode is used.

Signal multiplexing of satellite TV and radio channels is typically carried out in a central signal playout and uplink centre, such as ASTRA Platform Services in Germany, which provides playout, digital archiving, encryption, and satellite uplinks, as well as multiplexing, for hundreds of digital TV and radio channels.

In digital radio, both the Eureka 147 system of digital audio broadcasting and the in-band on-channel HD Radio, FMeXtra, and Digital Radio Mondiale systems can multiplex channels. This is essentially required with DAB-type transmissions (where a multiplex is called an ensemble), but is entirely optional with IBOC systems.

Analog broadcasting

In FM broadcasting and other analog radio media, multiplexing is a term commonly given to the process of adding subcarriers to the audio signal before it enters the transmitter, where modulation occurs. Multiplexing in this sense is sometimes known as MPX, which in turn is also an old term for stereophonic FM, seen on stereo systems since the 1960s.

Other meanings

In spectroscopy the term is used in a related sense to indicate that the experiment is performed with a mixture of frequencies at once and their respective response unravelled afterwards using the Fourier transform principle.

In computer programming, it may refer to using a single in-memory resource (such as a file handle) to handle multiple external resources (such as on-disk files).[1]

Some electrical multiplexing techniques do not require a physical "multiplexer" device, they refer to a "keyboard matrix" or "Charlieplexing" design style:

  • Multiplexing may refer to the design of a multiplexed display (non-multiplexed displays are immune to the Dorito effect).
  • Multiplexing may refer to the design of a "switch matrix" (non-multiplexed buttons are immune to "phantom keys" and also immune to "phantom key blocking").

See also

References

External links


Translations: Multiplex
Top

Dansk (Danish)
adj. - mangfoldig, multipleks
n. - multipleks, multipleksforbindelse
v. tr. - forbinde i multipleks
v. intr. - sende vha. multipleks, forbinde i multipleks

Nederlands (Dutch)
veelvoudig, multiplex (met één kanaal in meerdere gesplitst), hout met meerdere lagen, (betreffende) bioscoop met meerdere zalen, simultaan verwerken, met

Français (French)
adj. - (Télécom) multiplex
n. - (Télécom) multiplex, (US, Cin) complexe multi-salles
v. tr. - (Télécom) multiplexer
v. intr. - (Télécom) se multiplexer

Deutsch (German)
adj. - mannigfaltig, vielfältig
n. - multiples System
v. - in ein multiples System integrieren, gleichzeitig senden

Ελληνική (Greek)
adj. - πολλαπλός
n. - πολλαπλή τηλεγραφία, (καθομ.) συστεγαζόμενες κινηματογραφικές αίθουσες
v. - ενσωματώνω σε πολυταυτόχρονη εκπομπή

Italiano (Italian)
molteplice, sistema di trasmissione multipla (radio-TV), trasmettere in multiplex

Português (Portuguese)
adj. - múltiplo
n. - multiplexador (m) (Comp.)
v. - multiplexar (Comp.)

Русский (Russian)
составной, многократный, многочисленный, мультиплексный

Español (Spanish)
adj. - múltiple, multíplice
n. - múltiplex, multiplexor
v. tr. - transmitir por sistema múltiplex
v. intr. - transmitir por sistema múltiplex

Svenska (Swedish)
adj. - mångfaldig
n. - mångfald
v. - mångfaldiga

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
许多的, 多路通讯的, 多样的, 多路传输, 立体测图仪

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
adj. - 許多的, 多路通訊的, 多樣的
n. - 多路傳輸, 立體測圖儀
v. tr. - 多路傳輸
v. intr. - 多路傳輸

한국어 (Korean)
adj. - 복합의
n. - 입체 지도 작성 장치
v. tr. - 다중 송신하다
v. intr. - 다중 송신하다

日本語 (Japanese)
adj. - 多様な, 複合の
v. - 多重送信する

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(صفه) متعدد, عديد (الاسم) تعددي (فعل) يضاعف‏

עברית (Hebrew)
adj. - ‮בעל מרכיבים רבים, רב-חלקים, מגוון, מרובב - כרוך בהעברה בו-זמנית של מספר מסרים בערוץ תקשורת אחד‬
n. - ‮בית-קולנוע בריכוז בתי-קולנוע, מערכת אלקטרונית מרובבת‬
v. tr. - ‮שידר בו-זמנית כמה מסרים או אותות בערוץ תקשורת מרובב‬
v. intr. - ‮שידר בו-זמנית כמה מסרים או אותות במערכת מרובבת‬


 
 

 

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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Multiplexing" Read more
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