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bandwidth

Bandwidth is a term used in information technology to describe the capacity of a channel or medium to carry information. In data communications, bandwidth is commonly defined as the maximum rate at which data can be transmitted over a link, typically measured in bits per second (bps) and often expressed in kilobits per second, megabits per second, or gigabits per second. In signal processing and physics, bandwidth also refers to the width of the frequency spectrum occupied by a signal, measured in hertz.

The two contexts are related but distinct: a higher spectral bandwidth enables higher potential data rates,

Common terms include channel bandwidth, system bandwidth, and link bandwidth. Bandwidth is directional in networks, with

Factors affecting bandwidth include physical medium (fiber, copper, wireless), distance, interference, sharing among users, and network

but
the
actual
rate
depends
on
modulation,
coding,
overhead,
and
noise.
The
Shannon-Hartley
theorem
provides
a
theoretical
upper
limit
for
the
data
rate
given
bandwidth
and
signal-to-noise
ratio.
In
practice,
throughput—the
amount
of
useful
data
delivered
per
unit
time—can
be
lower
than
the
nominal
bandwidth
due
to
protocol
overhead,
congestion,
and
inefficiencies.
downstream
and
upstream
bandwidth
describing
capacity
in
each
direction.
The
term
has
entered
everyday
language
to
mean
the
amount
of
data
a
connection
can
carry
in
a
given
period.
equipment.
Fiber-optic
networks
routinely
provide
very
high
bandwidth,
while
wireless
connections
vary
with
technology,
environment,
and
user
density.