A modem (modulator-demodulator) is a
device that modulates an analog
carrier signal to encode digital information, and also
demodulates such a carrier signal to decode the transmitted information.
The goal is to produce a signal that can be
transmitted easily and decoded to reproduce the original digital data.
Modems can be used over any means of transmitting analog signals, from light emitting diodes to radio. The
most familiar example is a voice band modem that turns the digital data of a personal computer into modulated electrical signals in the voice frequency range of a telephone
channel. These signals can be transmitted over telephone lines and demodulated by
another modem at the receiver side to recover the digital data.
Modems are generally classified by the amount of data they can send
in a given unit of time, usually expressed in bits per second (bit/s, or bps), or bytes per second (B/s). Modems can
alternatively be classified by their symbol
rate, measured in baud. The baud unit denotes symbols per second,
or the number of times per second the modem sends a new signal. For
example, the ITU V.21 standard used audio frequency shift
keying, that is to say, tones of different frequencies, with two
possible frequencies corresponding to two distinct symbols (or one bit
per symbol), to carry 300 bits per second using 300 baud. By contrast,
the original ITU V.22 standard, which was able to transmit and receive
four distinct symbols (two bits per symbol), handled 1,200 bit/s by
sending 600 symbols per second (600 baud) using phase shift keying.
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