Sunday, March 20, 2011

Electromagnetic Interference

Electromagnetic interference (EMI) consists of outside electromagnetic noise that distorts the signal in a medium. When you listen to an AM radio, for example, you often hear EMI in the form of noise caused by nearby motors or lightning. Some network media are more susceptible to EMI than others. Crosstalk is a special kind of interference caused by adjacent wires. Crosstalk occurs when the signal from one wire is picked up by another wire. You may have experienced this when talking on a telephone and hearing another conversation going on in the background. Crosstalk is a particularly signi?cant problem with computer networks because large numbers of cables often are locatedclose together, with minimal attention to exact placement.

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