What is the difference between bit rate and baud rate? (original) (raw)
Learn how to understand the difference between bit rate and baud rate in this expert answer.
While bit rate and baud rate are closely linked, they aren't the same thing. Bit rate is a measure of the number of data bits -- zeros and ones -- that can be transmitted in one second. A bit rate of 2,400 bits per second (bps) for example, would mean 2,400 zeros and ones are transmitted each second.
Baud rate represents the number of times per second a signal (changing from zero to one or one to zero) or symbol (the connection's voltage, frequency or phase) in a communications channel changes state or varies. For example, a 2,400 baud rate means the channel is changing states up to 2,400 times per second. In this case, the baud rate is the same as the bit rate: 2,400 bps, and a bit rate of one equals a baud rate of one.
While bit rate and baud rate have similarities, they aren't the same.
analog telephone modems were simpler than digital communications, and often bits per second and baud were the same, with one symbol (baud) transmitting one bit. To make communications faster, more advanced modem use modulation techniques that send more bits per symbol. As a result, bit and baud rates aren't always the same number.
Depending upon the modulation used, if a channel can send up to four bits per baud, the baud state would change just once. So, the baud rate would be one-fourth the bit rate in this case.
You can think of the baud rate formula like this: bits per second = baud per second x the number of bits per baud.
Next Steps
Is gigabit wireless a necessity?
Think about capacity, not wireless throughput
Learn more about higher throughputs in data centers
Dig Deeper on Network infrastructure
- What is NRZ (non-return-to-zero)? By: Rahul Awati
- OpenAI targets knowledge workers with pricy ChatGPT Pro By: Shaun Sutner
- 10 multitouch attribution software and tools By: Christine Campbell
- Out-of-Pocket Healthcare Costs Double with Dementia Diagnosis By: Sara Heath
Related Q&A from Chris Partsenidis
An introduction to SFP ports on a Gigabit switch
SFP ports enable Gigabit switches to connect to a variety of fiber and Ethernet cables and extend switching functionality throughout the network.Continue Reading
MAC address vs. IP address: What's the difference?
A MAC address and an IP address each identify network devices, but they do the jobs at different levels. Explore the differences between the two and ...Continue Reading
What's the difference between half-duplex and full-duplex?
A half-duplex transmission could be considered a one-way street between sender and receiver. Full-duplex, on the other hand, enables two-way traffic ...Continue Reading