Pseudorandom binary sequence
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Pseudorandom binary sequence
A binary sequence (BS) is a sequence of N bits,
i.e. m ones and N-m zeros. A BS is pseudo-random (PRBS) if its
has only two values:
where
is called the duty cycle of the PRBS. A PRBS is random in a sense that the value of an a_j element is independent of the values of any of the other elements, similar to real random sequences. It is 'pseudo' because it is deterministic and after N elements it starts to repeat itself, unlike real random sequences, such as sequences generated by radioactive decay or by white noise. The PRBS is more general than the n-sequence, which is a special pseudo-random binary sequence of n bits generated as the output of a linear shift register. An n-sequence always has a 1/2 duty cycle and its number of elements N = 2^k-1. PRBS's are used in telecommunication, encryption, simulation, correlation technique and time-of-flight spectroscopy.
Practical implementationPseudorandom binary sequences can be generated using linear feedback shift registers. [1] ReferencesSee alsoExternal linkspl:PRBS ru:??????????????? ???????? ??????????????????
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