Eb/N0
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In
digital communication Data transmission and data reception or, more broadly, data communication or digital communications is the transfer and reception of data in the form of a digital bitstream or a digitized analog signal transmitted over a point-to-point or ...
or
data transmission Data transmission and data reception or, more broadly, data communication or digital communications is the transfer and reception of data in the form of a digital bitstream or a digitized analog signal transmitted over a point-to-point o ...
, E_b/N_0 (energy per bit to noise power spectral density ratio) is a normalized signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) measure, also known as the "SNR per bit". It is especially useful when comparing the
bit error rate In digital transmission, the number of bit errors is the number of received bits of a data stream over a communication channel that have been altered due to noise, interference, distortion or bit synchronization errors. The bit error rate (BER) ...
(BER) performance of different digital modulation schemes without taking bandwidth into account. As the description implies, E_b is the signal energy associated with each user data bit; it is equal to the signal power divided by the user bit rate (''not'' the channel symbol rate). If signal power is in watts and bit rate is in bits per second, E_b is in units of joules (watt-seconds). N_0 is the
noise spectral density In communications, noise spectral density (NSD), noise power density, noise power spectral density, or simply noise density (''N''0) is the power spectral density of noise or the noise power per unit of bandwidth. It has dimension of power over ...
, the noise power in a 1 Hz bandwidth, measured in watts per hertz or joules. These are the same units as E_b so the ratio E_b/N_0 is
dimensionless A dimensionless quantity (also known as a bare quantity, pure quantity, or scalar quantity as well as quantity of dimension one) is a quantity to which no physical dimension is assigned, with a corresponding SI unit of measurement of one (or 1) ...
; it is frequently expressed in decibels. E_b/N_0 directly indicates the power efficiency of the system without regard to modulation type, error correction coding or signal bandwidth (including any use of
spread spectrum In telecommunication and radio communication, spread-spectrum techniques are methods by which a signal (e.g., an electrical, electromagnetic, or acoustic signal) generated with a particular bandwidth is deliberately spread in the frequency d ...
). This also avoids any confusion as to ''which'' of several definitions of "bandwidth" to apply to the signal. But when the signal bandwidth is well defined, E_b/N_0 is also equal to the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in that bandwidth divided by the "gross" link spectral efficiency in bit/s⋅Hz, where the bits in this context again refer to user data bits, irrespective of error correction information and modulation type. E_b/N_0 must be used with care on interference-limited channels since additive white noise (with constant noise density N_0) is assumed, and interference is not always noise-like. In
spread spectrum In telecommunication and radio communication, spread-spectrum techniques are methods by which a signal (e.g., an electrical, electromagnetic, or acoustic signal) generated with a particular bandwidth is deliberately spread in the frequency d ...
systems (e.g.,
CDMA Code-division multiple access (CDMA) is a channel access method used by various radio communication technologies. CDMA is an example of multiple access, where several transmitters can send information simultaneously over a single communicatio ...
), the interference ''is'' sufficiently noise-like that it can be represented as I_0 and added to the thermal noise N_0 to produce the overall ratio E_b/(N_0 + I_0).


Relation to carrier-to-noise ratio

E_b/N_0 is closely related to the carrier-to-noise ratio (CNR or \frac), i.e. the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the received signal, after the receiver filter but before detection: \frac = \frac \frac wheref_b is the channel data rate ( net bit rate) and is the channel bandwidth. The equivalent expression in logarithmic form (dB): \text_\text = 10\log_\left(\frac\right) + 10\log_\left(\frac\right) Caution: Sometimes, the noise power is denoted by N_0/2 when negative frequencies and complex-valued equivalent
baseband In telecommunications and signal processing, baseband is the range of frequencies occupied by a signal that has not been modulated to higher frequencies. Baseband signals typically originate from transducers, converting some other variable int ...
signals are considered rather than
passband A passband is the range of frequencies or wavelengths that can pass through a filter. For example, a radio receiver contains a bandpass filter to select the frequency of the desired radio signal out of all the radio waves picked up by its antenn ...
signals, and in that case, there will be a 3 dB difference.


Relation to ''E''s/''N''0

E_b/N_0 can be seen as a normalized measure of the energy per symbol to noise power spectral density (E_s/N_0): \frac = \frac where E_s is the energy per symbol in joules and is the nominal
spectral efficiency Spectral efficiency, spectrum efficiency or bandwidth efficiency refers to the information rate that can be transmitted over a given Bandwidth (signal processing), bandwidth in a specific communication system. It is a measure of how efficiently a l ...
in (bits/s)/Hz. E_s/N_0 is also commonly used in the analysis of digital modulation schemes. The two quotients are related to each other according to the following: \frac = \frac \log_2(M) where is the number of alternative modulation symbols, e.g. M = 4 for QPSK and M = 8 for 8PSK. This is the energy per bit, not the energy per information bit. E_s/N_0 can further be expressed as: \frac = \frac\frac where\frac is the carrier-to-noise ratio or signal-to-noise ratio, is the channel bandwidth in hertz, andf_s is the symbol rate in baud or symbols per second.


Shannon limit

The Shannon–Hartley theorem says that the limit of reliable
information rate In telecommunications and computing, bit rate (bitrate or as a variable ''R'') is the number of bits that are conveyed or processed per unit of time. The bit rate is expressed in the unit bit per second (symbol: bit/s), often in conjunction w ...
(data rate exclusive of error-correcting codes) of a channel depends on bandwidth and signal-to-noise ratio according to: I < B \log_2 \left( 1 + \frac \right) where is the
information rate In telecommunications and computing, bit rate (bitrate or as a variable ''R'') is the number of bits that are conveyed or processed per unit of time. The bit rate is expressed in the unit bit per second (symbol: bit/s), often in conjunction w ...
in bits per second excluding error-correcting codes, is the
bandwidth Bandwidth commonly refers to: * Bandwidth (signal processing) or ''analog bandwidth'', ''frequency bandwidth'', or ''radio bandwidth'', a measure of the width of a frequency range * Bandwidth (computing), the rate of data transfer, bit rate or thr ...
of the channel in
hertz The hertz (symbol: Hz) is the unit of frequency in the International System of Units (SI), equivalent to one event (or cycle) per second. The hertz is an SI derived unit whose expression in terms of SI base units is s−1, meaning that o ...
, is the total signal power (equivalent to the carrier power ), and is the total noise power in the bandwidth. This equation can be used to establish a bound on E_b/N_0 for any system that achieves reliable communication, by considering a gross bit rate equal to the net bit rate and therefore an average energy per bit of E_b = S/R, with noise spectral density of N_0 = N/B. For this calculation, it is conventional to define a normalized rate R_l = R/(2B), a bandwidth utilization parameter of bits per second per half hertz, or bits per dimension (a signal of bandwidth can be encoded with 2B dimensions, according to the
Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem The Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem is a theorem in the field of signal processing which serves as a fundamental bridge between continuous-time signals and discrete-time signals. It establishes a sufficient condition for a sample rate that per ...
). Making appropriate substitutions, the Shannon limit is: = 2 R_l < \log_2 \left( 1 + 2R_l\frac \right) Which can be solved to get the Shannon-limit bound on E_b/N_0: \frac > \frac When the data rate is small compared to the bandwidth, so that R_l is near zero, the bound, sometimes called the ''ultimate Shannon limit'', is: \frac > \ln(2) which corresponds to −1.59dB. This often-quoted limit of −1.59 dB applies ''only'' to the theoretical case of infinite bandwidth. The Shannon limit for finite-bandwidth signals is always higher.


Cutoff rate

For any given system of coding and decoding, there exists what is known as a ''cutoff rate'' R_0, typically corresponding to an E_b/N_0 about 2 dB above the Shannon capacity limit. The cutoff rate used to be thought of as the limit on practical error correction codes without an unbounded increase in processing complexity, but has been rendered largely obsolete by the more recent discovery of turbo codes and low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes.


References


External links


Explained.
An introductory article on E_b/N_0 {{DEFAULTSORT:Eb-N0 Noise (electronics) Signal processing Engineering ratios