@prefix rdf: <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#> .
@prefix rdfs: <http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#> .
@prefix xsd: <http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#> .
@prefix owl: <http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#> .
@prefix constant: <http://qudt.org/vocab/constant/> .
@prefix dc: <http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/> .
@prefix dcterms: <http://purl.org/dc/terms/> .
@prefix prov: <http://www.w3.org/ns/prov#> .
@prefix qkdv: <http://qudt.org/vocab/dimensionvector/> .
@prefix quantitykind: <http://qudt.org/vocab/quantitykind/> .
@prefix qudt: <http://qudt.org/schema/qudt/> .
@prefix si-quantity: <https://si-digital-framework.org/quantities/> .
@prefix skos: <http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#> .
@prefix unit: <http://qudt.org/vocab/unit/> .
@prefix vaem: <http://www.linkedmodel.org/schema/vaem#> .
@prefix voag: <http://voag.linkedmodel.org/schema/voag#> .

quantitykind:DataRate
  a qudt:QuantityKind ;
  dcterms:description "The frequency derived from the period of time required to transmit one bit. This represents the amount of data transferred per second by a communications channel or a computing or storage device. Data rate is measured in units of bits per second (written \"b/s\" or \"bps\"), bytes per second (Bps), or baud. When applied to data rate, the multiplier prefixes \"kilo-\", \"mega-\", \"giga-\", etc. (and their abbreviations, \"k\", \"M\", \"G\", etc.) always denote powers of 1000. For example, 64 kbps is 64,000 bits per second. This contrasts with units of storage which use different prefixes to denote multiplication by powers of 1024, for example 1 kibibit = 1024 bits."^^qudt:LatexString ;
  qudt:applicableUnit unit:BIT-PER-SEC ;
  qudt:applicableUnit unit:ExaBIT-PER-SEC ;
  qudt:applicableUnit unit:GigaBIT-PER-SEC ;
  qudt:applicableUnit unit:KiloBIT-PER-SEC ;
  qudt:applicableUnit unit:KiloBYTE-PER-SEC ;
  qudt:applicableUnit unit:MegaBIT-PER-SEC ;
  qudt:applicableUnit unit:PetaBIT-PER-SEC ;
  qudt:applicableUnit unit:TeraBIT-PER-SEC ;
  qudt:dbpediaMatch "http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data_rate"^^xsd:anyURI ;
  qudt:hasDimensionVector qkdv:A0E0L0I0M0H0T-1D0 ;
  qudt:plainTextDescription "The frequency derived from the period of time required to transmit one bit. This represents the amount of data transferred per second by a communications channel or a computing or storage device. Data rate is measured in units of bits per second (written \"b/s\" or \"bps\"), bytes per second (Bps), or baud. When applied to data rate, the multiplier prefixes \"kilo-\", \"mega-\", \"giga-\", etc. (and their abbreviations, \"k\", \"M\", \"G\", etc.) always denote powers of 1000. For example, 64 kbps is 64,000 bits per second. This contrasts with units of storage which use different prefixes to denote multiplication by powers of 1024, for example 1 kibibit = 1024 bits." ;
  rdfs:comment "Applicable units are those of quantitykind:DataRate" ;
  rdfs:isDefinedBy <http://qudt.org/3.2.1/vocab/quantitykind> ;
  rdfs:label "Data Rate"@en ;
  skos:broader quantitykind:InformationFlowRate .
