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  2. Additive white Gaussian noise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Additive_white_Gaussian_noise

    AWGN is often used as a channel model in which the only impairment to communication is a linear addition of wideband or white noise with a constant spectral density (expressed as watts per hertz of bandwidth) and a Gaussian distribution of amplitude. The model does not account for fading, frequency selectivity, interference, nonlinearity or ...

  3. White noise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_noise

    This model is called a Gaussian white noise signal (or process). In the mathematical field known as white noise analysis , a Gaussian white noise w {\displaystyle w} is defined as a stochastic tempered distribution, i.e. a random variable with values in the space S ′ ( R ) {\displaystyle {\mathcal {S}}'(\mathbb {R} )} of tempered distributions .

  4. Gaussian noise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaussian_noise

    Principal sources of Gaussian noise in digital images arise during acquisition e.g. sensor noise caused by poor illumination and/or high temperature, and/or transmission e.g. electronic circuit noise. [3] In digital image processing Gaussian noise can be reduced using a spatial filter, though when smoothing an image, an undesirable outcome may ...

  5. Image noise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image_noise

    The sensor has inherent noise due to the level of illumination and its own temperature, and the electronic circuits connected to the sensor inject their own share of electronic circuit noise. [2] A typical model of image noise is Gaussian, additive, independent at each pixel, and independent of the signal intensity, caused primarily by Johnson ...

  6. White noise analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_noise_analysis

    First, white noise is a generalized stochastic process with independent values at each time. [12] Hence it plays the role of a generalized system of independent coordinates, in the sense that in various contexts it has been fruitful to express more general processes occurring e.g. in engineering or mathematical finance, in terms of white noise.

  7. Noise (signal processing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noise_(signal_processing)

    Electromagnetically induced noise, audible noise due to electromagnetic vibrations in systems involving electromagnetic fields; Noise (video), such as "snow" Noise (radio), such as "static", in radio transmissions; Image noise, affects images, usually digital ones Salt and pepper noise or spike noise, scattered very dark or very light pixels

  8. Linear–quadratic–Gaussian control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear–quadratic...

    It concerns linear systems driven by additive white Gaussian noise. The problem is to determine an output feedback law that is optimal in the sense of minimizing the expected value of a quadratic cost criterion. Output measurements are assumed to be corrupted by Gaussian noise and the initial state, likewise, is assumed to be a Gaussian random ...

  9. Non-local means - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-local_means

    Application of non-local means to an image corrupted by Gaussian noise Non-local means is an algorithm in image processing for image denoising . Unlike "local mean" filters, which take the mean value of a group of pixels surrounding a target pixel to smooth the image, non-local means filtering takes a mean of all pixels in the image, weighted ...