Trellis-coded pulse-amplitude modulation (TC-PAM) is the modulation format that is used in HDSL2 and G.SHDSL. It is a variant of trellis coded modulation (TCM) which uses a one-dimensional pulse-amplitude modulation (PAM) symbol space, as opposed to a two-dimensional quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) symbol space.[1] Compared to the 2B1Q scheme used in the older HDSL and SDSL standards, TC-PAM improves range at a given bit-rate and provides enhanced spectral compatibility with ADSL.
TC-PAM is also known as 4B1H, because it uses 16 levels to represents a 4 digit binary, 4 Binary 1 Hexadecimal.
YouTube Encyclopedic
-
1/2Views:3834 404
-
Mind Radar Quiz
-
The C.O.W.S. with Pam (THE BEAUTY CON GAME) Nov 14, 2012
Transcription
References
- ^ Johannes Huber. "Multilevel-Codes: Distance Profiles and Channel Capacity".