Kilobit per second

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Bit rates
Decimal prefixes (SI)
Name Symbol Multiple
kilobit per second kbit/s 103
megabit per second Mbit/s 106
gigabit per second Gbit/s 109
terabit per second Tbit/s 1012
Binary prefixes
(IEC 60027-2)
kibibit per second Kibit/s 210
mebibit per second Mibit/s 220
gibibit per second Gibit/s 230
tebibit per second Tibit/s 240

A kilobit per second (kbit/s or kbps) is a unit of data transfer rate equal to 1,000 bits per second. It is sometimes used to mean 1,024 bits per second, using the binary meaning of the kilo- prefix, though this is rare and non-standard.

Examples:

Most digital representations of audio are measured in kbit/s:

(These values vary depending on audio data compression schemes)

  • 4 kbit/s – minimum necessary for recognizable speech (using special-purpose speech codecs)
  • 8 kbit/s – telephone quality
  • 32 kbit/s – MW quality
  • 96 kbit/s – FM quality
  • 192 kbit/s – "CD quality" for an mp3
  • 1,411 kbit/s – CD audio (at 16-bits for each channel and 44.1 kHz)

[edit] Related units

Another unit of data transmission is the kilobyte per second (kbyte/s or kB/s or kBps), which is 1,000 or 1,024 bytes per second. Bytes are typically 8 bits in modern systems, but even when 8-bit bytes are used, the number of kbyte/s is not necessarily exactly one eighth the number of kbit/s because the count of bytes might not include framing bits. For example, a 56 kbit/s RS-232 serial line transfers only 5.6 kbyte/s — not 7 kbyte/s — when used in the most common configuration (asynchronous, 8 data bits, no parity, one stop bit). It is fairly common to use kbyte/s with the binary meaning (1,024 byte/s) — more so than for kbit/s — perhaps because of the close relationship with the common binary usage of kilobyte for measuring file sizes.

Another related unit is the kibibit per second:

103 = 1,000 bit/s = 1 kbit/s (one kilobit or one thousand bits per second)
210 = 1,024 bit/s = 1 Kibit/s (one kibibit per second)

[edit] See also