A signal's data rate is often confused with its baud rate rate. The two are closely linked but are not identical.
The data rate is a measure of how many bytes or bits of data can be sent per second. The baud rate, on the other hand is a measure of how many physical bits are sent per second, including start and stop bits and other idle bits. The baud rate is therefore higher than the data bit rate. A typical asynchronous serial signal that runs at a rate of 9600 baud will carry ten bits for every byte of data sent. One bit is a start bit. Another is the stop bit and the remaining eight are the eight bits of data. The bit rate is actually 8/10 x 9600 = 7680 bits per second.
Most transmission methods have an overhead that makes the data rate a little slower than the baud rate. In time critical applications, the difference between them can become significant.
The amount of data transferred through a channel
Channel capacity - It is the rate at which the data can be transmitted over a given path, or channel, under the given conditions. Key factors affecting the channel capacity are- Data rate- speed of data transmission measured in bits per second. Bandwidth – Maximum. Bandwidth, noise, and error rate.
due to more data there will be more channels and having more information will take more time on a channel this why there will be more channel capacity
A. Noisy Channel: Defines theoretical maximum bit rate for Noisy Channel: Capacity=Bandwidth X log2(1+SNR) Noiseless Channel: Defines theoretical maximum bit rate for Noiseless Channel: Bit Rate=2 X Bandwidth X log2L
ISDN BRI is a Basic Rate Interface for ISDN networks (Intergrated Services Device Network). It consists of 2 Channels: B+D. B channel is used for data and voice and consists of two 64Kbps channels=128Kbps. D channel is used for the signal and control of the interface and is 16Kbps. Together the B+D chanels are refered to as 2B+D. The maximum data rate on a BRI is therefore 128Kbps. NOTE:PRI is Primary rate Interface which uses 23x64Kbps B channel and 1x64Kbps D channel (T-1)
A 'fibre channel', or in the US 'fiber channel', is a means of transmitting data between computer devices at very fast rates. At the moment the fastest transfer rate is 4gbps.
110kbps
Two basic channels (2B) of 64 Kbps and one data channel (D) of 16 kbps.
The channel used in a digital communication system is used to convey an information signal. A channel has certain capacity for putting in information that is measured by bandwidth in Hz or data rate.
The following are the major factors can affect network channel capacity: 1.Data rate-----Bits per second 2.Bandwidth---Cycles per second (Hertz) 3.Error rate
by Nyquist theorem max data rate = 2H log2 V bits /sec so H= 4KHz.. and v=2 ( say binary is transmitting ) therefore max data rate = 2 * 4 *103 *log22 bps max data rate = 8000 bps Bcoz it is sampling per 1ms so
An adaptive data transfer channel providing means for a data management access method (AM) to define the channel subsystem data block transfer size and to transfer an extended data block (EDB) by a single channel transfer command to avoid repeated channel command word (CCW) command decode and status presentation operations. veer thakur chandigarh
Any time-slot on any GSM radio channel assigned to GPRS usage is defined as a Packet. Data CHannel(PDCH).