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In telecommunications, an eye pattern, also known as an eye diagram, is an oscilloscope display in which a digital signal from a receiver is repetitively sampled and applied to the vertical input (y-axis), while the data rate is used to trigger the horizontal sweep (x-axis). It is so called because, for several types of coding, the pattern ...
A Tektronix model 475A portable analog oscilloscope, a typical instrument of the late 1970s Oscilloscope cathode-ray tube, the left square-shaped end would be the blue screen in the upper device when built in. Typical display of an analog oscilloscope measuring a sine wave signal with 10 kHz. From the grid inherent to the screen together with ...
A PC-based oscilloscope is a type of digital oscilloscope which relies on a standard PC platform for waveform display and instrument control. In general, there are two types of PC-based oscilloscopes Standalone oscilloscopes which contain an internal PC platform (PC mainboard) – common with upper mid-range and high-end oscilloscopes
LMS (long, medium, short), is a color space which represents the response of the three types of cones of the human eye, named for their responsivity (sensitivity) peaks at long, medium, and short wavelengths. The numerical range is generally not specified, except that the lower end is generally bounded by zero.
Cones, in contrast, while having much lower intensity sensitivity, have much better time resolution than rods do. For both rod- and cone-mediated vision, the fusion frequency increases as a function of illumination intensity, until it reaches a plateau corresponding to the maximal time resolution for each type of vision.
Diagram of RS232 signalling as seen when probed by an Oscilloscope for an uppercase ASCII "K" character (0x4b) with 1 start bit, 8 data bits, 1 stop bit: Date: 6 March 2009, 10:25 (UTC) Source: Rs232_oscilloscope_trace.jpg; Author: Rs232_oscilloscope_trace.jpg: Ktnbn; derivative work: Samuel Tardieu (talk) Other versions
A vectorscope is a special type of oscilloscope used in both audio and video applications. [1] Whereas an oscilloscope or waveform monitor normally displays a plot of signal vs. time, a vectorscope displays an X-Y plot of two signals, which can reveal details about the relationship between these two signals.
The Tektronix 2400 Series oscilloscopes were perhaps the most powerful instruments of their time, with the 2445, 2465, and 2467 being the top-end models and the 2430 series of digitizing storage oscilloscopes providing digital storage. They combined high bandwidth and sampling rates with automation features and waveform processing capabilities.