CHANNEL CAPACITY


In electrical engineering and computer science, 'channel capacity' is the tightest upper bound on the amount of information that can be reliably transmitted over a communications channel. By the noisy-channel coding theorem, the channel capacity of a given channel is the limiting information rate (in units of information per unit time) that can be achieved with arbitrarily small error probability. [1] [2]
Information theory, developed by Claude E. Shannon during World War II, defines the notion of channel capacity and provides a mathematical model by which one can compute it. The key result states that the capacity of the channel, as defined above, is given by the maximum of the mutual information between the input and output of the channel, where the maximization is with respect to the input distribution.

Contents
Formal definition
Noisy channel coding theorem
Example application
References
See also

Formal definition



Let ''X'' represent the space of signals that can be transmitted, and ''Y'' the space of signals received, during a block of time over the channel. Let
: p_{Y|X}(y|x)
be the conditional distribution function of ''Y'' given ''X''. Treating the channel as a known statistic system, p_{Y|X}(y|x) is an inherent fixed property of the communications channel (representing the nature of the noise in it). Then the joint distribution
: p_{X,Y}(x,y)
of ''X'' and ''Y'' is completely determined by the channel and by the choice of
: p_X(x) = int_yp_{X,Y}(x,y),dy
the marginal distribution of signals we choose to send over the channel. The joint distribution can be recovered by using the identity
: p_{X,Y}(x,y)=p_{Y|X}(y|x),p_X(x)
Under these constraints, next maximize the amount of information, or the message, that one can communicate over the channel. The appropriate measure for this is the mutual information I(X;Y), and this maximum mutual information is called the 'channel capacity' and is given by
: C = sup_{p_X} I(X;Y),

Noisy channel coding theorem


The channel coding theorem states that for any ε > 0 and for any rate ''R'' less than the channel capacity ''C'', there is an encoding and decoding scheme that can be used to ensure that the probability of block error is less than ε for a sufficiently long code. Also, for any rate greater than the channel capacity, the probability of block error at the receiver goes to one as the block length goes to infinity.

Example application


An application of the channel capacity concept to an additive white Gaussian noise channel with ''B'' Hz bandwidth and signal-to-noise ratio ''S/N'' is the Shannon–Hartley theorem:
: C = B log_2 (1 + S/N).
The signal and noise powers ''S'' and ''N'' are measured in watts or volts2, so the signal-to-noise ratio here is expressed as a power ratio, ''not'' in decibels (dB); since figures are often cited in dB, a conversion may be needed. For example, 30 dB is a power ratio of 10^{30/10} = 10^3 = 1000.

References


1. Channel capacity Saleem Bhatti
2. Signals look like noise! Jim Lesurf

See also



Bit rate

Code rate

Shannon–Hartley theorem

Hartley's law

Sender, Encoder, Decoder, Receiver

Negentropy

Exformation

Redundancy

Error exponent

Throughput

★ Link and system spectral efficiency

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