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Encyclopedia > Duobinary signal

In telecommunication, a duobinary signal is a pseudobinary-coded signal in which a "0" ("zero") bit is represented by a zero-level electric current or voltage; a "1" ("one") bit is represented by a positive-level current or voltage if the quantity of "0" bits since the last "1" bit is even, and by a negative-level current or voltage if the quantity of "0" bits since the last "1" bit is odd.


Note 1: Duobinary signals require less bandwidth than NRZ.


Note 2: Duobinary signaling also permits the detection of some errors without the addition of error-checking bits.


Source: from Federal Standard 1037C and from MIL-STD-188


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Partial Response signaling and modulation (3126 words)
It does not matter how much ISI distorts the signal as long as we know at the time of the sampling instant what the amount of that interference is. This amount is zero for raised cosine signaling because the signal shape (a sinc function) is forced to pass through zero as shown in Fig.
Duobinary is composed of the sum of two sinc functions of the same sign.
When a bi-level signal such as the binary signal with 1s and 0s is input into a duobinary or a modified duobinary filter, a three level signal is produced.
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