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effective bandwidth

effective bandwidth

[ə¦fek·tiv ′band‚width]
(electronics)
The bandwidth of an assumed rectangular band-pass having the same transfer ratio at a reference frequency as a given actual band-pass filter, and passing the same mean-square value of a hypothetical current having even distribution of energy throughout that bandwidth.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
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References in periodicals archive
The effective bandwidth is computed in advance by a negotiation.
The measured peak gain of the proposed antenna varies from -0.86 to 2.37 dBi within the effective bandwidth. The measured efficiency of the broadband antenna is above 46.5% at the operating band and about 75% peak efficiency at 3.5 GHz.
With the assistance of LLPC [7, 10, 11] control, it can be based on the feedback control to further expand the effective bandwidth of the active vibration isolation.
The BoD (Bandwidth on Demand) service provided by the T-SDN network helps implement more flexible Data-Center service scheduling and greatly improves user experience while managing services through effective bandwidth optimization and interval of time.
Divided into sections covering networks and flows, advanced flow theory, topological design, stochastic processes and queues, loss networks, simple packet networks, flow-controlled packet networks, effective bandwidth, multi-service systems, multi-service network analysis, and survivable networks, this text discusses the nature of the network design process, covering the subject's complexity in depth, while introducing core theoretical concepts, problems, and solutions.
This mode of satellite modulation, also known as smaller guard intervals, will soon be standardised under DVB-S2x, maximising the effective bandwidth of satellite transponders.
An effective bandwidth of 13% is obtained when [H.sub.1] and [H.sub.2] are set as 8 mm.
Using the proposed structure, the antenna exhibits an effective bandwidth of 57.1% from 1.0 to 1.8 GHz for VSWR < 2 and AR < 3dB.
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