The term
digital signal has related definitions in different contexts.
In digital electronics digital signal In
digital electronics, a digital signal is a
pulse amplitude modulated signal, i.e., a sequence of fixed-width electrical pulses or light pulses, each occupying one of a discrete number of levels of amplitude. A special case is a
logic signal or a
binary signal, which varies between a low and a high signal level. The pulse trains in
digital circuits are typically generated by
metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET) devices, due to their rapid on–off
electronic switching speed and
large-scale integration (LSI) capability. In contrast,
bipolar junction transistors more slowly generate signals resembling
sine waves. The digital signal may be stored, processed or transmitted physically as a
pulse-code modulation (PCM) signal.
In communications (FSK) signal is alternating between two waveforms and allows passband transmission. It is considered a means of digital
data transmission. digital signal used in baseband transmission (line coding) In
digital communications, a digital signal is a continuous-time physical signal, alternating between a discrete number of waveforms, representing a
bitstream. The shape of the waveform depends on the transmission scheme, which may be either a
line coding scheme allowing
baseband transmission; or a
digital modulation scheme, allowing
passband transmission over long wires or over a limited radio frequency band. Such a carrier-modulated sine wave is considered a digital signal in literature on digital communications and data transmission, but considered as a bit stream converted to an analog signal in specific cases where the signal will be carried over a system meant for analog communication, such as an analog telephone line. In communications, sources of interference are usually present, and noise is frequently a significant problem. The effects of interference are typically minimized by filtering off interfering signals as much as possible and by using
data redundancy. The main advantages of digital signals for communications are often considered to be noise immunity, and the ability, in many cases such as with audio and video data, to use
data compression to greatly decrease the bandwidth that is required on the communication media. ==Logic voltage levels==