<Tr> <Td> 196 </Td> <Td> 4980 </Td> <Td> 4970--4990 </Td> <Td> 20 </Td> <Td> N / A </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> Unknown </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> No </Td> <Td> No </Td> </Tr> <Tr> <Th> Channel </Th> <Th> Center Frequency (MHz) </Th> <Th> Frequency Range (MHz) </Th> <Th> Bandwidth (MHz) </Th> <Th> United States FCC U-NII Band (s) </Th> <Th> United States </Th> <Th> Canada </Th> <Th> Europe </Th> <Th> Switzerland </Th> <Th> Russia </Th> <Th> Japan </Th> <Th> India </Th> <Th> Singapore </Th> <Th> China </Th> <Th> Israel </Th> <Th> Korea </Th> <Th> Turkey </Th> <Th> Australia </Th> <Th> South Africa </Th> <Th> Brazil </Th> <Th> Taiwan </Th> <Th> New Zealand </Th> </Tr> <P> China MIIT expanded allowed channels as of 31 December 2012 to add UNII - 1, 5150 ~ 5250 GHz, UNII - 2, 5250 ~ 5350 GHz (DFS / TPC), similar to European standards EN 301.893 V1. 7.1 . </P> <P> The 802.11 p amendment, also known as Wireless Access in Vehicular Environments (WAVE), published on 15 July 2010, specifies WLAN in the licensed Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) band of 5.9 GHz (5.850--5.925 GHz). The 802.11 p standard is intended for use in vehicular communication systems . </P>

How many non overlapping channels in the 5ghz band