Wikipedia Article of the Day
Randomly selected articles from my personal browsing history
The signal-to-interference ratio (SIR or S/I), also known as the carrier-to-interference ratio (CIR or C/I), is the quotient between the average received modulated carrier power S or C and the average received co-channel interference power I, i.e. crosstalk, from other transmitters than the useful signal. The CIR resembles the carrier-to-noise ratio (CNR or C/N), which is the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR or S/N) of a modulated signal before demodulation. A distinction is that interfering radio transmitters contributing to I may be controlled by radio resource management, while N involves noise power from other sources, typically additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN).
History
Oct 21
Year 2038 problem
Oct 20
Anointed Quorum
Oct 19
Exponential distribution
Oct 18
Provo, Utah
Oct 17
PageRank
Oct 16
Endowment (Mormonism)
Oct 15
Base32
Oct 14
Fisher–Yates shuffle
Oct 13
Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
Oct 12
Turing completeness
Oct 11
Festivus
Oct 10
Bresenham's line algorithm
Oct 9
Council of Fifty
Oct 8
Étienne Provost
Oct 7
Equal-time rule
Oct 6
Rapeseed oil
Oct 5
Cramér–Rao bound
Oct 4
Lactate threshold
Oct 3
Fairness doctrine
Oct 2
Castle Valley, Utah
Oct 1
2020 Utah gubernatorial election
Sep 30
Tunguska event
Sep 29
Lexicographic order
Sep 28
Cross-site request forgery
Sep 27
Progressive web app
Sep 26
Gerrymandering in the United States
Sep 25
Poisson distribution
Sep 24
Dyatlov Pass incident
Sep 23
Dyatlov Pass incident
Sep 22
Fanum tax