The number of bits that "pass" a given point in a telecommunication network usually within a second is referred to as a bit rate Thus, a bit rate is usually measured in some multiple of bits per second for example, kilobits, or thousands of bits per second (kbps) The term bit rate is also a synonym for data transfer rate (or simply data rate)
The rate of data throughput on the medium in bits per second Ethernet specifies 10 million bits per second
The speed at which binary digits (bits) would be transmit ted over a communications path and usually expressed in "bits per second" ( bps) Bit rate should not be confused with Baud which defines the rate of signal state changes
Amount of digital information transmitted in a certain period of time, expressed in bits per second
The speed at which bits are transmitted, usually expressed as "bits per second," or bps Compared to Baud
The rate at which bits are transmitted or received during communication, expressed as the number bits in a given amount of time, usually 1 second
Amount of digital information that can be transmitted in a given time period, usually stated in millions of bits per second (Mbps)
The transmission rate of binary symbols ("0" and "1") Bit rate is equal to the total number of bits transmitted in one second
Number of bits per second transmitted over a communications medium Often abbreviated as bps, kbps, mbps, gbps, tbps
In developing an audio sound for computers or telecommunication, the bit rate (or sampling rate) is the number of samples of a sound (as an analog event) that are taken each second to represent that sound digitally The more samples taken per second, the more accurate the digital representation of the sound can be For example, the current sample rate for CD-quality audio is 44,100 samples per second This sample rate can accurately reproduce the audio frequencies up to 20,500 Hertz (cycles per second), covering the full range of human hearing
In a bit stream, the number of bits occurring per unit time, usually expressed in bits per second (188) Note: For n-ary operation, the bit rate is equal to log2n times the rate (in bauds), where n is the number of significant conditions in the signal
Bit rate is the capacity characteristic of digital signals as defined by the number of bits (or bytes) per second that a channel will support For example, a transmission facility that can support information exchange at the rate of I megabit per second (1 Mbps or 1,000,000 bits per second) delivers the same quantity of information, i e , throughput, as a 1 kilobit per second (kbps or 1,000 bits per second) facility, but, in only 1/1000 of the time
The amount of bits that can be sent per second Usually described in units of kbps or Mbps and frequently referred to as the data rate
A measure of bandwidth, expressed as the number of bits transmitted per second A 28 8 Kbps modem, for example, can transmit or receive around 29,000 bits per second
The speed at which bits are transmitted, usually expressed in bits per second See baud