Bit Error Ratio

In telecommunication, an error ratio is the ratio of the number of bits, elements, characters, or blocks incorrectly received to the total number of bits, elements, characters, or blocks sent during a specified time interval. The most commonly encountered ratio is the bit error ratio (BER). Note: For a given communication system, the bit error ratio will be affected by both the data transmission rate and the signal power margin. Note 1: Examples of bit error ratio are (a) transmission BER, i.e., the number of erroneous bits received divided by the total number of bits transmitted; and (b) information BER, i.e., the number of erroneous decoded (corrected) bits divided by the total number of decoded (corrected) bits. Note 2: The BER is usually expressed as a coefficient and a power of 10; for example, 2.5 erroneous bits out of 100,000 bits transmitted would be 2.5 out of 105 or 2.5 × 10-5. Note 3: On good connections you have an BER below 10E-9. The test time for a 95% confidence Level on a:
STM-256 / OC-768 = 1 s
STM-64 / OC-192 = 3 s
STM-16c / OC-48c = 12 s
STM-4c / OC-12c = 48 s
STM-1 / OC-3 = 3.2 min
Source: from Federal Standard 1037C and from MIL-STD-188

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
balanced line
balance return loss
balancing network
band stop filter
bandwidth compression
barrage jamming
baseband
base communications
basic exchange telecommunications radio service
basic service
basic service element
basic serving arrangement
bch code
beam diameter
beam divergence
beam steering
beamwidth
b8zs
bel
bias
bias distortion
bilateral synchronization
billboard antenna
binary notation
bipolar signal
bit count integrity
bit inversion
bit pairing
bit robbing
bit sequence independence
bit slip
bit stream transmission
bit stuffing
bit synchronous operation
black facsimile transmission
black noise
black recording
blind transmission
block
block check character
blocking
block transfer attempt
bonding
branch