Bit Error Rate (BER) is a critical performance metric in optical communications that measures the number of errors occurring in a transmitted data stream over a certain period. As optical links are increasingly used for high-speed data transfer, understanding and managing BER becomes essential to ensure. The BER refers to the ratio of erroneously received bits to the total number of bits transmitted in a digital signal, serving as a precise quantitative measure of the quality of a digital transmission channel or system. This ratio is most often expressed using scientific notation (e., 10⁻⁸. 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. signal-to-noise (SNR) ratio, resulting in “waterfall curves”, log-log plots usually showing a d cline in BER at some critical SNR, which becomes a benchmark in.
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