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J-carrier - technical definition

A hierarchy of standards for digital transmission that essentially is the Japanese version of the United States T-carrier digital carrier system.At levels one and two, J-carrier mimics T-carrier with respect to the signaling rates, but diverges at level three and beyond. J-carrier also uses a different PCM companding technique (A-law rather than µ-law). As J-carrier is medium-independent, it can be provisioned over any of the transmission media, at least at the J-1 rate of 1.544 Mbps. (At the J-3 rate of 32.064 Mbps, twisted pair is unsuitable due to issues of signal attenuation.) The fundamental building block of J-carrier is a 64-kbps channel, referred to as DS-0 (Digital Signal level Zero).Through time division multiplexing (TDM), J-carrier interleaves DS-0 channels at various signaling rates to create the services that comprise the Japanese digital hierarchy, as detailed in Table J-1.
Table J-1: Japanese Digital Hierarchy: J-carrier
J-carrier LevelData Rate64-kbps Channels (DS-0s)Equivalent J1s
064 kbps1Not applicable
J-11.544 Mbps241
J-2  4 5
J-332.064 Mbps48020
J-497.728 Mbps1,44060
J-5565.148 Mbps7,680320
See digital signal hierarchy for a side-by-side comparison of the North American, European, and Japanese digital hierarchies. See also A-law, carrier, channel, companding, digital, DS-0, E-carrier, J-1, J-2, J-3, J-4, J-5, µ-law, PCM, signaling rate, T-carrier, and TDM.

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