Data signaling rate
|
|
This article needs attention from an expert in Telecommunications. (November 2008) |
In telecommunication, data signaling rate (DSR), also known as gross bit rate, is the aggregate rate at which data pass a point in the transmission path of a data transmission system.
Notes:
- The DSR is usually expressed in bits per second.
- The data signaling rate is given by
where m is the number of parallel channels, ni is the number of significant conditions of the modulation in the i-th channel, and Ti is the unit interval, expressed in seconds, for the i-th channel. - For serial transmission in a single channel, the DSR reduces to (1/T)log2n; with a two-condition modulation, i. e. n = 2, the DSR is 1/T, according to Hartley's law.
- For parallel transmission with equal unit intervals and equal numbers of significant conditions on each channel, the DSR is (m/T)log2n; in the case of a two-condition modulation, this reduces to m/T.
- The DSR may be expressed in bauds, in which case, the factor log2ni in the above summation formula should be deleted when calculating bauds.
- In synchronous binary signaling, the DSR in bits per second may be numerically the same as the modulation rate expressed in bauds. Signal processors, such as four-phase modems, cannot change the DSR, but the modulation rate depends on the line modulation scheme, in accordance with Note 4. For example, in a 2400 bit/s 4-phase sending modem, the signaling rate is 2400 bit/s on the serial input side, but the modulation rate is only 1200 bauds on the 4-phase output side.
Contents
Maximum rate[edit]
The maximum user signaling rate, synonymous to gross bitrate or data signaling rate, is the maximum rate, in bits per second, at which binary information can be transferred in a given direction between users over the telecommunications system facilities dedicated to a particular information transfer transaction, under conditions of continuous transmission and no overhead information.
For a single channel, the signaling rate is given by [clarification needed], where SCSR is the single-channel signaling rate in bits per second, T is the minimum time interval in seconds for which each level must be maintained, and n is the number of significant conditions of modulation of the channel.
In the case where an individual end-to-end telecommunications service is provided by parallel channels, the parallel-channel signaling rate is given by [clarification needed], where PCSR is the total signaling rate for m channels, m is the number of parallel channels, Ti is the minimum interval between significant instants for the I-th channel, and ni is the number of significant conditions of modulation for the I-th channel.
In the case where an end-to-end telecommunications service is provided by tandem channels, the end-to-end signaling rate is the lowest signaling rate among the component channels.
Transmission Data Rate Terminology[edit]
| Data Rate | Abbreviation | Lower | Upper |
|---|---|---|---|
| Extremely Low Data Rate | ELDR | 3 bit/s | 30 bit/s |
| Super Low Data Rate | SLDR | 30 bit/s | 300 bit/s |
| Ultra Low Data Rate | ULDR | 300 bit/s | 3 kbit/s |
| Very Low Data Rate | VLDR | 3 kbit/s | 30 kbit/s |
| Low Data Rate | LDR | 30 kbit/s | 300 kbit/s |
| Medium Data Rate | MDR | 300 kbit/s | 3 Mbit/s |
| High Data Rate | HDR | 3 Mbit/s | 30 Mbit/s |
| Very High Data Rate | VHDR | 30 Mbit/s | 300 Mbit/s |
| Ultra High Data Rate | UHDR | 300 Mbit/s | 3 Gbit/s |
| Super High Data Rate | SHDR | 3 Gbit/s | 30 Gbit/s |
| Extremely High Data Rate | EHDR | 30 Gbit/s | 300 Gbit/s |
Based upon proposal from davisnetworks.com. 1 Mbit/s is defined as 1,000,000 bits per second signal data rate (OSI Layer 1).
Data Rate and Standard[edit]
| Data Rate | Standard |
|---|---|
| 155 Mbit/s | OC-3 |
| 622 Mbit/s | OC-12 |
| 1063 Mbit/s | Fibre Channel |
| 1250 Mbit/s | GbE |
| 2125 Mbit/s | 2xFibre Channel |
| 2488 Mbit/s | OC-48 |
| 2500 Mbit/s | 2xGbE, infiniband |
| 2666 Mbit/s | OC-48(FEC) |
| 3125 Mbit/s | 10 DbE LX-4 |
| 4250 Mbit/s | 4xFibre Channel |
| 9.953 Gbit/s | OC-192 |
| 10.3125 Gbit/s | 10 GbE |
| 10.51875 Gbit/s | 10 G Fibre Channel |
| 10.664 Gbit/s | OC-192 (FEC) |
| 10.709 Gbit/s | OC-192 (ITU-T G.709) |
| 11.100 Gbit/s | 10 GbE FEC |
| 11.300 Gbit/s | 10 G Fibre Channel |
See also[edit]
References[edit]
This article incorporates public domain material from the General Services Administration document "Federal Standard 1037C".
where m is the number of parallel channels, ni is the number of significant conditions of the