- #1
eetuz
- 1
- 0
Hi all,
this question about bandwidth has been bugging me and I haven't been able to find an answer yet.
Im not so familiar with the topic so this might be some glitch in my thinking which I hope you guys could clarify:
Why is max bitrate in a channel two times its bandwidth? For example, if I have two different frequency "levels" in a FM signal for representing 0 and 1, how does the extra bandwidth give me more bits per second? As far as I understand, it enables me to have more signal levels to represent more different bit sequences such as 01 and 10, but how this works in this case where I only have two levels.
And does higher frequency automatically transfer to higher bitrate or is this all just about larger bandwidth in general?
Thanks, eetuz
this question about bandwidth has been bugging me and I haven't been able to find an answer yet.
Im not so familiar with the topic so this might be some glitch in my thinking which I hope you guys could clarify:
Why is max bitrate in a channel two times its bandwidth? For example, if I have two different frequency "levels" in a FM signal for representing 0 and 1, how does the extra bandwidth give me more bits per second? As far as I understand, it enables me to have more signal levels to represent more different bit sequences such as 01 and 10, but how this works in this case where I only have two levels.
And does higher frequency automatically transfer to higher bitrate or is this all just about larger bandwidth in general?
Thanks, eetuz