Bit Error Rate
Bit Error Rate
Example
As an example, assume this transmitted bit sequence: 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1, and the following received bit sequence: 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1, The number of bit errors (the underlined bits) is in this case 3. The BER is 3 incorrect bits divided by 10 transferred bits, resulting in a BER of 0.3 or 30%.
Similar measurements can be carried out for the transmission of frames, blocks, or symbols.
Bit-error rate curves for BPSK, QPSK, 8-PSK and 16-PSK, AWGN channel.
BER comparison between BPSK and differentially-encoded BPSK with gray-coding operating in white noise.
Mathematical draft
The BER is the likelihood of a bit misinterpretation due to electrical noise transmission, we have for a "1" and Knowing that the noise has a bilateral spectral density is and is . . , for a "0". Each of and has a period of . . Considering a bipolar NRZ
Returning to BER, we have the likelihood of a bit misinterpretation and where is the threshold of decision, set to 0 when . to find the final expression :
Bit error rate All Ones (or Mark) A pattern composed of ones only. This pattern causes the repeater to consume the maximum amount of power. If DC to the repeater is regulated properly, the repeater will have no trouble transmitting the long ones sequence. This pattern should be used when measuring span power regulation. An unframed all ones pattern is used to indicate an AIS (also known as a Blue Alarm). All Zeros A pattern composed of zeros only. It is effective in finding equipment misoptioned for AMI, such as fiber/radio multiplex low-speed inputs. Alternating 0s and 1s - A pattern composed of alternating ones and zeroes. 2 in 8 Pattern contains a maximum of four consecutive zeros. It will not invoke a B8ZS sequence because eight consecutive zeros are required to cause a B8ZS substitution. The pattern is effective in finding equipment misoptioned for B8ZS. Bridgetap - Bridge taps within a span can be detected by employing a number of test patterns with a variety of ones and zeros densities. This test generates 21 test patterns and runs for 15 minutes. If a signal error occurs, the span may have one or more bridge taps. This pattern is only effective for T1 spans that transmit the signal raw. Modulation used in HDSL spans negates the Bridgetap patterns' ability to uncover bridge taps. Multipat - This test generates 5 commonly used test patterns to allow DS1 span testing without having to select each test pattern individually. Patterns are: All Ones, 1:7, 2 in 8, 3 in 24, and QRSS. T1-DALY and 55 OCTET - Each of these patterns contain fifty-five (55), eight bit octets of data in a sequence that changes rapidly between low and high density. These patterns are used primarily to stress the ALBO and equalizer circuitry but they will also stress timing recovery. 55 OCTET has fifteen (15) consecutive zeroes and can only be used unframed without violating ones density requirements. For framed signals, the T1-DALY pattern should be used. Both patterns will force a B8ZS code in circuits optioned for B8ZS.
References
[1] Digital Communications, John Proakis, Massoud Salehi, McGraw-Hill Education, Nov 6, 2007 [2] "Keyboards and Covert Channels" (http:/ / crypto. com/ papers/ jbug-Usenix06-final. pdf) by Gaurav Shah, Andres Molina, and Matt Blaze (2006?)
This article incorporatespublic domain material from the General Services Administration document "Federal Standard 1037C" (http://www.its.bldrdoc.gov/fs-1037/fs-1037c.htm) (in support of MIL-STD-188).
External links
QPSK BER for AWGN channel online experiment (http://www.etti.unibw-muenchen.de/labalive/ experiment/qpskber/)
License
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 //creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/