B.S.T.J. briefs A new signal format for efficient data transmisson
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Data communication systems in current use generally require substantially more bandwidth than the Nyquist minimum of one-half cycle per symbol. This comes about for two main reasons: first, the baseband signal spectrum has a gradual roll-off beyond the theoretical minimum;1 second, the modulation process needed to translate the baseband spectrum to the bandpass channel generates additional side frequencies which must be preserved to permit recovery of the signal. For example, a recently described vestigial-sideband system2 uses an extra 50 per cent of bandwidth for each of these two reasons. Consequently, such a system handles one symbol per cycle, and each symbol can convey as many levels as the signal-to-noise ratio permits — independent of all adjacent symbols. Thus, with n levels, each symbol yields log 2 n binary digits.
[1] R. Howson. An Analysis of the Capabilities of Polybinary Data Transmission , 1965 .
[2] Harry Nyquist. Certain Topics in Telegraph Transmission Theory , 1928 .
[3] F. K. Becker,et al. Automatic equalization for digital communication , 1965 .
[4] Adam Lender. Correlative level coding for binary-data transmission , 1966, IEEE Spectrum.