In telecommunications, the (digital) cliff effect or brickwall effect describes the sudden loss of digital signal reception. Unlike analog signals, which gradually fade when signal strength decreases, or electromagnetic interference or multipath increases, a digital signal provides data which is either perfect or non-existent at the receiving end. It is named for a graph (shown below) of reception quality versus signal quality, where the digital signal "falls off a cliff" instead of having a gradual roll-off. The phenomenon is primarily seen in broadcasting, where signal strength is liable to vary, rather than in recorded media, which generally have a good signal. However, it may be seen in significantly damaged media, which is at the edge of readability.
Digital television
This effect can most easily be seen on digital television, including
both satellite TV and over-the-air terrestrial TV. While forward error
correction is applied to the broadcast, when a minimum threshold of signal
quality (a maximum bit error rate) is reached it is no longer enough for the
decoder to recover. The picture may break up (pixellation), lock on a freeze
frame, or go blank. Causes include rain fade or solar transit on satellites,
and temperature inversions and other weather or atmospheric conditions causing
anomalous propagation on the ground.
The cliff effect is a particularly serious issue for mobile TV, as
signal quality may vary significantly, particularly if the receiver is moving
rapidly, as in a car.
Digital radio
HD Radio broadcasting, officially used only in the United States, is
one system designed to have an analog fallback. Receivers are designed to
immediately switch to the analog signal upon losing a lock on digital, but only
as long as the tuned station operates in hybrid digital mode (the official
meaning of "HD"). In the future all-digital mode, there is no analog
to fallback to at the edge of the digital cliff. It is also important for the
station's broadcast engineer to make sure that the audio signal is synchronized
between analog and digital, or the cliff effect will still cause a jump
slightly forward or backward in the radio program.
Mobile phones
The cliff effect is also heard on mobile phones, where one or both sides of the conversation may break up, possibly resulting in a dropped call. Other forms of digital radio also suffer from this.
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