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In telecommunications, an interference is that which modifies a signal in a disruptive manner, as it travels along a communication channel between its source and receiver. The term is often used to refer to the addition of unwanted signals to a useful signal. Common examples include: Electromagnetic interference (EMI)
Radio resource management (RRM) is the system level management of co-channel interference, radio resources, and other radio transmission characteristics in wireless communication systems, for example cellular networks, wireless local area networks, wireless sensor systems, and radio broadcasting networks.
Polarization-Division Communication System As a practical consequence, at the receiving site the two streams are received with a residual mutual interference. In many practical cases, especially for high-level M- QAM modulations, the communication system cannot tolerate the experienced levels of cross-polarization interference and an improved ...
When the baseband filters in the communication system satisfy the Nyquist criterion, symbols can be transmitted over a channel with flat response within a limited frequency band, without ISI. Examples of such baseband filters are the raised-cosine filter , or the sinc filter as the ideal case.
Detecting and identifying sources of electrical interference in telecommunications systems, particularly broadband networks, is a critical aspect of maintaining reliable communication services. Various tools and methodologies are employed for this purpose, each playing a specific role in diagnosing and resolving interference-related issues.
In the USA, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) propagation models used to space stations on the same frequency are not always accurate in prediction of signals and interference. An example of this situation is in some parts of Fayetteville, Arkansas the local 99.5 FM KAKS is displaced by KXBL 99.5 FM in Tulsa, Oklahoma particularly on ...
Multipath propagation is similar in power line communication and in telephone local loops.In either case, impedance mismatch causes signal reflection. High-speed power line communication systems usually employ multi-carrier modulations (such as OFDM or wavelet OFDM) to avoid the intersymbol interference that multipath propagation would cause.
For wireless systems, they may be allocated a slice of the electromagnetic spectrum to transmit in (for example, FM radio is often broadcast in the 87.5–108 MHz range). This allocation is usually administered by a government agency; in the case of the United States this is the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).