The symbol rate is related to
gross bit rate expressed in . The term baud has sometimes incorrectly been used to mean
bit rate, since these rates are the same in old
modems as well as in the simplest digital communication links using only one bit per symbol, such that binary digit 0 is represented by one symbol, and binary digit 1 by another symbol. In more advanced modems and data transmission techniques, a symbol may have more than two states, so it may represent more than one
bit. A bit (binary digit) always represents one of two states. If bits are conveyed per symbol, and the gross bit rate is , inclusive of channel coding overhead, the symbol rate can be calculated as : f_\text{s} = {R \over N}. By taking information per pulse
N in bit/pulse to be the base-2-
logarithm of the number of distinct messages
M that could be sent,
Hartley constructed a measure of the
gross bit rate R as : R = f_\text{s} N\quad where \quad N = \left \lceil \log_2(M) \right \rceil. Here, the \left \lceil x \right \rceil denotes the ceiling function of x, where x is taken to be any real number greater than zero, then the ceiling function rounds up to the nearest natural number (e.g. \left \lceil 2.11 \right \rceil = 3). In that case, different symbols are used. In a modem, these may be time-limited
sine wave tones with unique combinations of amplitude, phase or frequency. For example, in a
64QAM modem, , and so the bit rate is times the baud rate. In a line code, these may be
M different voltage levels. The ratio is not necessarily an integer; in
4B3T coding, the bit rate is of the baud rate. (A typical
basic rate interface with a raw data rate operates at 120 kBd.) Codes with many symbols, and thus a bit rate higher than the symbol rate, are most useful on channels such as telephone lines with a limited
bandwidth but a high
signal-to-noise ratio within that bandwidth. In other applications, the bit rate is less than the symbol rate.
Eight-to-fourteen modulation as used on audio CDs has bit rate of the baud rate. ==See also==