Digital and Analogue Signals
Speech or music can be converted into electrical signals to be transmitted over long distances through cables or using electromagnetic waves (radio waves) as carriers.
Information can also be converted into light or infrared signals and sent along optical fibres.
As signals travel they become weaker and additions to the signal (noise) may be picked up.
Signals which vary continuously in amplitude and/or frequency are called analogue signals, e.g. the sound waves of speech and music.
The different frequencies within the signal may weaken by different amounts. Each time the signal is amplified, these differences, and any noise picked up, are also amplified.
In other words, the signal becomes less like the original. Its quality deteriorates.
Signals can be coded into a series of pulses. The signal can only be on or off. These are called digital signals.
Digital signals have a higher quality than analogue signals. The information they carry is not changed during transmission.
Although the pulses weaken with distance, they are still recognisable as ‘on’ or ‘off’.
Any noise picked up is generally of low amplitude, so it is interpreted as off and is ignored.
More information can also be sent in a given time as a digital signal, whether it is by cable, optical fibre or carrier wave.
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