DATA RATE LIMITS

A very important consideration in data communications is how fast we can send data, in bits per second, over a channel. Data rate depends on three factors:

  1. The bandwidth available
  2. The level of the signals we use
  3. The quality of the channel (the level of noise)


Topics discussed in this section:

  • Noiseless Channel: Nyquist Bit Rate
  • Noisy Channel: Shannon Capacity
  • Using Both Limits


Noiseless Channel
For a noiseless channel, the Nyquist bit rate formula defines the theoretical maximum bit rate:
BitRate=2×Bandwidth×log2L
Where, bandwidth is the bandwidth of the channel, L is the number of signal levels used to represent data, and BitRate is the bit rate in bits per second.

Note
Increasing the levels of a signal may
reduce the reliability of the system.

Noisy Channel-Shannon Capacity
  • In reality, we cannot have a noiseless channel; the channel is always noisy.
  • In 1944,Claude Shannon introduced a formula, called the Shannon capacity, to determine the theoretical highest data rate for a noisy channel:
Capacity=Bandwidth×log2(1+SNR)
  • Where, bandwidth is the bandwidth of the channel,SNR is the signal-to-noise ratio, and capacity is the capacity of the channel in bits per second.


Note
The Shannon capacity gives us the
upper limit; the Nyquist formula tells us
how many signal levels we need.

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