Bandwidth - A brief Introduction
What is Bandwidth ?
The bandwith is the range of frequencies within a given band. In simple words we can say that the Bandwidth is the amount of data that
can be carried from one point to another in a given time period
(usually a second). Technically speaking, Bandwidth is the information
carrying capacity of a communication channel. The channel may be analog
or digital. Analog transmissions are measured in cycles per second
(hertz or Hz) and digital transmissions are measured in bits per second.
A bit propagates through a medium close to the speed of light. The
number of bits that can be transferred per second depends on the rate at
which the transmitter can send the data.
In general, Fast Ethernet is rated at 100 M bits / sec. But due to
latency caused by congestion or other factors, a system may never
operate at its optimal rate. Throughput is the measured performance of a
system as opposed to its performance. The throughput changes with the
environmental factors like noise, data errors, attenuation due to cable
distance and so on.
Copper cable, fibre optic cable and wireless communication systems all
have different transmission characteristics and thus have different
bandwidths.
Encoding and compression techniques have improved data rates. The higher
the bandwidth of a data channel, the higher the transmission rate.
Increasing the bandwidth may not provide data rates that support
realtime voice and video transfers. A single user transferring a large
file can quickly consume all the bandwidth, holding up voice and video
packets and causing delay distortions.