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White Noise is the eighth novel by Don DeLillo, published by Viking Press in 1985. It won the U.S. National Book Award for Fiction. [1] White Noise is a cornerstone example of postmodern literature. It is widely considered DeLillo's breakout work and brought him to the attention of a much larger audience.
White noise draws its name from white light, [2] although light that appears white generally does not have a flat power spectral density over the visible band. An image of salt-and-pepper noise In discrete time , white noise is a discrete signal whose samples are regarded as a sequence of serially uncorrelated random variables with zero mean ...
The FBISE was established under the FBISE Act 1975. [2] It is an autonomous body of working under the Ministry of Federal Education and Professional Training. [3] The official website of FBISE was launched on June 7, 2001, and was inaugurated by Mrs. Zobaida Jalal, the Minister for Education [4] The first-ever online result of FBISE was announced on 18 August 2001. [5]
It is also known as differentiated white noise, due to its being the result of the differentiation of a white noise signal. Due to the diminished sensitivity of the human ear to high-frequency hiss and the ease with which white noise can be electronically differentiated (high-pass filtered at first order), many early adaptations of dither to ...
Chapter Twenty-one, Chapter 21, or Chapter XXI may also refer to: Television "Chapter 21" (Eastbound & Down) "Chapter 21" (House of Cards) "Chapter 21" "Chapter ...
In the simplest case of white noise, even if the root mean square of noise is 10 3 times as large as the signal to be recovered, if the bandwidth of the measurement instrument can be reduced by a factor much greater than 10 6 around the signal frequency, then the equipment can be relatively insensitive to the noise. In a typical 100 MHz ...
Different types of noise are generated by different devices and different processes. Thermal noise is unavoidable at non-zero temperature (see fluctuation-dissipation theorem), while other types depend mostly on device type (such as shot noise, [1] [3] which needs a steep potential barrier) or manufacturing quality and semiconductor defects, such as conductance fluctuations, including 1/f noise.
The real part of impedance, [()], is in general frequency dependent and so the Johnson–Nyquist noise is not white noise. The RMS noise voltage over a span of frequencies f 1 {\displaystyle f_{1}} to f 2 {\displaystyle f_{2}} can be found by taking the square root of integration of the power spectral density: