In
telephony, the usable
voice frequency band ranges from approximately 300 to 3400
Hz. It is for this reason that the
ultra low frequency band of the
electromagnetic spectrum between 300 and 3000 Hz is also referred to as
voice frequency, being the electromagnetic energy that represents acoustic energy at
baseband. The
bandwidth allocated for a single
voice-frequency transmission channel is usually 4 kHz, including
guard bands, allowing a
sampling rate of 8 kHz to be used as the basis of the
pulse-code modulation system used for the digital
PSTN. Per the
Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem, the sampling frequency (8 kHz) must be at least twice the highest component of the voice frequency (4 kHz) via appropriate filtering prior to sampling at discrete times for effective reconstruction of the voice signal. == Fundamental frequency ==