Want this question answered?
Yes. Different code rates change the number of bits conveyed by each symbol. Therefore, the bit rate will change.
QAM-64 encodes 6 bits per symbol (2^6=64). Baud rate = symbol rate = bit rate / bits per symbol = 72000 bps / 6 bits per symbol = 12000
8 Bits
6 bits
10 mbps ethernet uses Manchester encoding where each symbol is represented by 2 bit sequence. Hence the bits/symbol is 2. Since data rate = bits/symbol x symbol/seconds, symbols/seconds = baud rate = 5 mega baudWhat_is_the_baud_rate_of_the_standard_10-Mbps_Ethernet
A single byte represents 8 bits.
== ==
facts
bites
A bit is a single digit of a binary number.
Not in computing. A bit is a single entity. A nibble is four bits. A byte is eight bits.
7 bits per baud. With a constellation of 128 points = 2^7 points, each symbol can carry 7 bits.