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Signal regeneration is the process of restoring degraded or attenuated electrical or optical signals to their original quality during transmission across long distances or through high-speed interconnects. It is essential in high-speed communication systems, such as PCIe, Ethernet, and optical networks, where signal integrity deteriorates due to noise, dispersion, or loss over cables, backplanes, or fiber.
As a signal travels through a medium, it experiences attenuation, jitter, and distortion. Signal regeneration combats this by using active components, such as repeaters, retimers, or re-drivers, to:
In optical systems, optical-electrical-optical (OEO) regenerators convert optical signals to electrical, clean and amplify them, then convert them back to optical form.
Signal regeneration is critical in:
Rambus offers PCIe Retimer Controllers with CXL Support, providing a highly optimized low-latency data path for signal regeneration. Learn more here.
