Chemistry Reference and  Research
           
 
Periodic Table
- standard table
- large table
 
Chemical Elements
- by name
- by symbol
- by atomic number
 
Chemical Properties
 
Chemical Reactions
 
Organic Chemistry
 
Branches of Chemistry
Analytical chemistry
Biochemistry
Computational Chemistry
Electrochemistry
Environmental chemistry
Geochemistry
Inorganic chemistry
Materials science
Medicinal chemistry
Nuclear chemistry
Organic chemistry
Pharmacology
Physical chemistry
Polymer chemistry
Supramolecular Chemistry
Thermochemistry

Jitter

Jitter is also the name of a set of video processing and matrix manipulation extensions to Max/MSP.

In telecommunication, jitter is an abrupt and unwanted variation of one or more signal characteristics, such as the interval between successive pulses, the amplitude of successive cycles, or the frequency or phase of successive cycles.

Jitter may be specified in qualitative terms (e.g. amplitude, phase, pulse width or pulse position), or quantitative terms (e.g. mean, RMS, or peak-to-peak displacement).

The low-frequency cutoff for jitter is usually specified at 1 Hz.

For clock jitter, there are two main parameters: phase jitter and cycle to cycle jitter (or period jitter)

Phase jitter consists of peak to peak phase jitter and RMS phase jitter. The peak to peak phase jitter is the difference between the maximum and minimum phase of the clock signal over all time. The RMS phase jitter is the standard deviation of the peak to peak phase jitter.

Cycle to cycle (or period) jitter is the variation from one period to the next adjacent period of the signal. In order to determine the variation between adjacent periods, all consecutive periods need to be measured. The peak to peak period jitter is the worst case of cycle to cycle jitter.

Inside digital to analog converters jitter causes unwanted high-frequency distortions. In this case it can be suppressed with high fidelity clock signal usage.

See also

Source: Federal Standard 1037C and MIL-STD-188

01-04-2007 01:16:19
The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. How to see transparent copy