Is the digital signal distorted during transmission and storage?


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Is the digital signal distorted during transmission and storage?

DIGITAL AUDIO

Since any digital signal is represented as a real voltage or current electrical curve, its shape is distorted in one way or another during any transmission, and a signal “frozen” for storage (signalogram) is subject to degradation due to physical reasons. common.

Digital Audio

All of these influences on the shape of the carrier signal are interferences that, up to a certain value, do not change the information content of the signal, since individual distortions and letter loss in words generally do not interfere with the correct understanding of words. words, and information redundancy, such as an increase in the length of the words, increases the probability of successful recognition. … In other words, the carrier signal itself can be distorted, but the information it carries, the encoded audio signal, remains unchanged in the vast majority of cases.

So that the quality of the carrier signal does not deteriorate, any transmission of useful audio information (copying, writing to a carrier and reading it) must necessarily include the operation of restoring the form of the carrier signal, and ideally, and the digital form primary of the information signal, and only after that the newly generated carrier signal can be transmitted to the next consumer. In the case of direct copy without restoration (for example, simply rewriting a video cassette with a digital signal obtained with a PCM decoder in common VCRs), the quality of the digital signal deteriorates, although it still contains all the information it carries. However, after repeated sequential copies or long-term storage, the quality deteriorates so much that unrecoverable errors begin to appear that irreversibly distort the information carried by the signal. Therefore, the copying and transmission of digital signals should be done only on digital devices and, when stored on media, should be “updated” in a timely manner without waiting for irreversible degradation (for magnetic media, this period is estimated to be several years ). A correctly transmitted or updated digital signallogram does not lose quality and can be copied and exist forever in absolutely unaltered form. without waiting for irreversible degradation (for magnetic carriers this period is estimated to be several years). A correctly transmitted or updated digital signallogram does not lose quality and can be copied and exist forever in absolutely unaltered form. without waiting for irreversible degradation (for magnetic carriers this period is estimated to be several years). A correctly transmitted or updated digital signallogram does not lose quality and can be copied and exist forever in absolutely unaltered form.

However, it should not be forgotten that the correctness of any code is finite, and the actual carriers are far from ideal, therefore the occurrence of unrecoverable errors is such a rare thing, especially with careless handling of the carrier. When reading new and correctly stored DAT cassettes or CDs on high-quality and reliable devices, these errors practically do not occur, however, with aging, contamination and damage of media and reading systems, they become more. A single uncorrected error is almost always invisible to the ear due to interpolation, however, it leads to distortion of the original sound signal, and the accumulation of such errors over time begins to be felt in the ear.

A separate problem is the difficulty of recording uncorrected errors, as well as verifying the identity of the original and the copy. Very often, designers of digital audio devices operating in real time do not care about the issue of accurate verification of the reliability of the transmission, considering that the measures taken to correct the errors are sufficient. In the general case, the impossibility of retransmitting an erroneous sample or block leads to interpolation occurring secretly and after copying it is impossible to say with certainty whether the original signal was copied exactly. Error indicators, which are found on some devices, usually light up only at the moment of their appearance, and in the case of single errors, their operation can easily go unnoticed. Even in personal computer-based systems, it is often impossible to control the accuracy of reception through a digital interface or direct reading from a CD; the only way out is to repeat the operation and compare the results.


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Author: R. Arias

R. Arias is the author of this article and has extensive experience for more than 30 years as a recording engineer and audio specialist, as well as more than 20 years of experience creating algorithms related to audio and video. Linkedin