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  2. Coaxial cable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coaxial_cable

    Assuming the dielectric properties of the material inside the cable do not vary appreciably over the operating range of the cable, the characteristic impedance is frequency independent above about five times the shield cutoff frequency. For typical coaxial cables, the shield cutoff frequency is 600 Hz (for RG-6A) to 2,000 Hz (for RG-58C).

  3. Hybrid fiber-coaxial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hybrid_fiber-coaxial

    In a hybrid fiber-coaxial cable system, television channels are sent from the cable system's distribution facility, the headend, to local communities through optical fiber subscriber lines. At the local community, an optical node translates the signal from a light beam to radio frequency (RF), and sends it over coaxial cable lines for ...

  4. Frequency-division multiplexing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency-division...

    For example, the coaxial cable used by cable television systems has a bandwidth of about 1000 MHz, but the passband of each television channel is only 6 MHz wide, so there is room for many channels on the cable (in modern digital cable systems each channel in turn is subdivided into subchannels and can carry up to 10 digital television channels).

  5. Asynchronous serial interface - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asynchronous_serial_interface

    Asynchronous Serial Interface, or ASI, is a method of carrying an MPEG Transport Stream over 75-ohm copper coaxial cable or optical fiber. [1] It is popular in the television industry as a means of transporting broadcast programs from the studio to the final transmission equipment before it reaches viewers sitting at home.

  6. Multimedia over Coax Alliance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multimedia_over_Coax_Alliance

    The Multimedia over Coax Alliance (MoCA) is an international standards consortium that publishes specifications for networking over coaxial cable.The technology was originally developed to distribute IP television in homes using existing cabling, but is now used as a general-purpose Ethernet link where it is inconvenient or undesirable to replace existing coaxial cable with optical fiber or ...

  7. DOCSIS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOCSIS

    A mid-split increases the upstream frequency range to 5–85 MHz, supporting a total shared upstream capacity of ~450 Mbit/s (assuming 4 SC-QAM + OFDMA channels) for the service group. [ 26 ] A high-split increases the upstream frequency range to 5–204 MHz, supporting a total shared upstream capacity of ~1.5 Gbit/s (assuming 4 SC-QAM + OFDMA ...

  8. Cable television - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cable_television

    Most cable companies require a set-top box (cable converter box) or a slot on one's TV set for conditional access module cards [2] to view their cable channels, even on newer televisions with digital cable QAM tuners, because most digital cable channels are now encrypted, or scrambled, to reduce cable service theft. A cable from the jack in the ...

  9. Frequency-division multiple access - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency-division...

    Frequency-division multiple access (FDMA) is a channel access method used in some multiple-access protocols. FDMA allows multiple users to send data through a single communication channel, such as a coaxial cable or microwave beam, by dividing the bandwidth of the channel into separate non-overlapping frequency sub-channels and allocating each sub-channel to a separate user.