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GridFix Labs Reference Series | Physics & Signal Integrity
Signal Jitter: Sync vs. Async
The Physics of Timing Variation
GridFix Technical Team Last Updated: January 31, 2026 12 min read Read
Verified by Engineering
What is Jitter?
Think of a pulse train as a rhythmic beat. If every pulse arrives exactly when expected, jitter is zero. If some arrive slightly early and others slightly late, the signal has jitter.
Synchronous vs. Asynchronous Timing
The approach to jitter depends on how the transmitter and receiver agree on time.
- Synchronous: A shared clock signal is sent alongside the data. Common in local PCB buses (e.g., DDR Memory). If the clock signal and data signal wander apart (Skew), the system fails.
- Asynchronous: No shared clock. The receiver must 'guess' the clock by looking at the data transitions. This is used in almost all long-haul networking (Ethernet, Fiber).
Clock and Data Recovery (CDR)
In asynchronous systems, we use a Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) to perform Clock Recovery. The PLL 'locks' onto the incoming data transitions and generates a stable internal clock to sample the data.
Conclusion
As we move to 100G and 400G networking, we are fighting physics in the picosecond domain. Understanding the sources of jitter—from noisy power supplies to poor cable shielding—is the hallmark of a master network engineer.
Technical Standards & References
REF [1]
Howard Johnson (1993)
High-Speed Digital Design: A Handbook of Black Magic
Published: Prentice Hall
REF [2]
N. Da Dalt (2018)
Jitter and Phase Noise in Communication Systems
Published: Cambridge University Press
Mathematical models derived from standard engineering protocols. Not for human safety critical systems without redundant validation.