i think its 96000BPS
start bit signals receiver end to receive sequence of bits(data bits) and stop bit to signal the end of bit transmission.
Bit rate = 8 / (16 * 10-9) bits/second
In Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS), the bit rate of the original signal is spread over a wider bandwidth by multiplying it with a pseudo-random noise (PN) sequence, known as the spreading code. This results in a higher chip rate, which is the rate at which the individual bits of the original signal are processed. Consequently, while the bit rate of the original signal remains unchanged, the effective transmission rate is increased due to the spreading, allowing for improved resistance to interference and better security. Therefore, the relationship is that the bit rate of the original signal is maintained, but the spread signal operates at a higher chip rate.
What is the bit rate of a signal in which 10 bit lasts 20 microseconds?
The duration of 1 bit can be calculated using the formula: duration = 1 / bit rate. For a signal with a bit rate of 100 bps (bits per second), the duration of 1 bit is 1 / 100 seconds, which equals 0.01 seconds or 10 milliseconds.
An OC-1 (Optical Carrier level 1) has a bit rate of 51.84 Mbps. A DS-3 (Digital Signal level 3) signal has a bit rate of 44.736 Mbps. Since an OC-1 can carry a DS-3 signal, it can accommodate this bit rate, allowing for efficient transmission of the DS-3 data within the OC-1 framework.
32 kHz
Bit Interval: The time required to send one signal bit. Bit Rate: The number of bits that are conveyed or processed per unit of time. (Example: 100MB/sec)
Basically the baud rate can never be greater than the bit rate. Baud rate can only be equal or less than the bit rate. However, there are instances that baud rate maybe greater than the bit rate. In Return-to-zero or Manchester encoding, where there are two signaling elements, the baud rate is twice the bit rate and therefore requires more bandwidth.
Answeryes it is AnswerRb = 4000 bpsTb = 1/Rb = 250 μsKotsos
What is the baud rate of a digital signal that employs the differential Manchester scheme and has a data transfer rate of 2000 bps.
computer networking