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Glossary of commom CCTV terms
TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
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AGC
- Automatic Gain Control. A circuit for automatically controlling amplifier
gain in order to maintain a constant output voltage with a varying input
voltage within a predetermined range of input-to-output variation.
-
Aperture
- In television optics, it is the effective diameter of the lens that
controls the amount of light reaching the photoconductive or photoemitting
image pickup sensor.
-
Aperture Correction
- Compensation for the loss in sharpness of detail because of the finite
dimensions of the image elements or the dot-pitch of the monitor.
-
Aspect Ratio
- The ratio of width to height for the frame of the televised picture.
4:3 for standard systems, 5:4 for 1K x 1K, and 16:9 for HDTV.
-
Attenuation
- In general terms, a reduction in signal strength.
-
Auto Balance
- A system for detecting errors in color balance in white and black
areas of the picture and automatically adjusting the white and black
levels of both the red and blue signals as needed for correction.
-
Auto Light Range
- The range of light, e.g., sunlight to moonlight, over which a TV camera
is capable of automatically operating at specified output.
-
Automatic Brightness
Control
- In display devices, the self-acting mechanism which controls brightness
of the device as a function of ambient light.
-
Automatic Frequency
- An arrangement whereby the frequency of an oscillator is automatically
maintained within specified limits.
-
Automatic Gain Control
- A process by which gain is automatically adjusted as a function of
input or other specified parameter.
-
Automatic Iris Lens
- A lens that automatically adjusts the amount of light reaching the
imager.
-
Automatic Light Control
- The process by which the illumination incident upon the face of a
pickup device is automatically adjusted as a function of scene brightness.
-
Back Porch
- That portion of the composite picture signal which lies between the
trailing edge of the horizontal sync pulse and the trailing edge of
the corresponding blanking pulse.
-
Bandwidth
- The number of cycles per second (Hertz) expressing the difference
between the lower and upper limiting frequencies of a frequency band;
also, the width of a band of frequencies.
-
Bar Test Pattern
- Special test pattern for adjusting color TV receivers or color encoders.
The upper portion consists of vertical bars of saturated colors and
white. The power horizontal bars have black and white areas and I and
Q signals.
-
Blooming
- The defocusing of regions of the picture where the brightness is at
an excessive level, due to enlargement of spot size and halation of
the fluorescent screen of the cathode-ray picture tube. In a camera,
sensor element saturation and excess which causes widening of the spatial
representation of a spot light source.
-
Bounce
- Sudden variations in picture presentation (brightness, size, etc.,)
independent of scene illumination.
-
Brightness
- The attribute of visual perception in accordance with which an area
appear to emit more of less light. (Luminance is the recommended name
for the photo-electric quantity which has also been called brightness.)
-
Broadband
- In television system use, a device having a bandpass greater than
the band of a single VHF television channel.
-
Burned-In-Image
- Also called burn. An image which persists in a fixed position in the
output signal of a camera tube after the camera has been turned to a
different scene or, on a monitor screen.
-
CCD
- See Charge Coupled Device
-
C Mount
- A television camera lens mount of the 16 mm format, 1 inch in diameter
with 32 threads per inch.
-
CCTV
- Common abbreviation for Closed-Circuit Television.
-
Charge-Coupled Device
- CCD. For imaging devices, a self-scanning semiconductor array that
utilizes MOS technology, surface storage, and information transfer by
shift register techniques.
-
Chroma
- That quality of color which embraces both hue and saturation. White,
black, and grays have no chroma.
-
Chroma Control
- A control of color television receiver that regulates the saturation
(vividness) of colors in a color picture.
-
Chroma Detector
- Detects the absence of chrominance information in a color encoder
input. The chroma detector automatically deletes the color burst from
the color encoder output when the absence of chrominance is detected.
-
Chromatic Aberration
- An optical defect of a lens which causes different colors or wave
lengths of light to be focused at different distances from the lens.
It is seen as color fringes or halos along edges and around every point
in the image.
-
Chromaticity
- The color quality of light which is defined by the wavelength (hue)
and saturation. Chromaticity defines all the qualities of color except
its brightness.
-
Chrominance
- A color term defining the hue and saturation of a color. Does not
refer to brightness.
-
Chrominance Signal
- That portion of the NTSC color television signal which contains the
color information.
-
Clamp
- A device which functions during the horizontal blanking or synchronizing
interval to fix the level of the picture signal at some predetermined
reference level at the beginning of each scanning line.
-
Clamping
- The process that established a fixed level for the picture level at
the beginning of each scanning line.
-
Clipping
- The shearing off of the peaks of a signal. For a picture signal. This
effects the positive (white).
-
Coaxial Cable
- A particular type of cable capable of passing a wide range of frequencies
with very low signal loss. Such a cable in its simplest form, consists
of a hollow metallic shield with a single wire accurately placed along
the center of the shield and isolated from the shield.
-
Color Burst
- That portion of the composite color signal, comprising a few cycles
of a sine wave of chrominance subcarrier frequency, which is used to
establish a reference for demodulating the chrominance signal. Normally
approximately 9 cycles of 3.579545 MHz.
-
Color Edging
- Extraneous colors appearing at the edges of colored objects, and differing
from the true colors in the object.
-
Color Encoder
- A device which produces an NTSC color signal from separate R, G, and
B video inputs.
-
Color Fringing
- Spurious colors introduced into the picture by the change in position
of the televised object from field to field.
-
Color Purity
- The degree to which a color is free of white or any other color. In
reference to the operation of a tri-color picture tube it refers to
the production of pure red, green or blue illumination of the phosphor
dot face plate.
-
Color Saturation
- The degree to which a color is free of white light.
-
Color Sync Signal
- A signal used to establish and to maintain the same color relationships
that are transmitted.
-
Color Transmission
- The transmission of a signal which represents both the brightness
values and the color values in a picture.
-
Composite Video Signal
- The combined picture signal, including vertical and horizontal blanking
and synchronizing signals.
-
Compression
- The reduction in gain at one level of a picture signal with respect
to the gain at another level of the same signal.
-
Contrast
- The range of light to dark values in a picture or the ratio between
the maximum and minimum brightness values.
-
Contrast Range
- The ratio between the whitest and blackest portions of television
image.
-
Convergence
- The crossover of the three electron beams of a three-gun tri-color
picture tube. This normally occurs at the plane of the aperture mask.
-
Crosstalk
- An undesired signal from a different channel interfering with the
desired signal.
-
dB
- Basically, a measure of the power ratio of two signals. In system
use, a measure of the voltage ratio of two signals, provided they are
measured across a common impedance.
-
Decoder
- The circuitry in a color TV receiver which transforms the detected
color signals into a form suitable to operate the color tube.
-
Definition
- The fidelity of a television system to the original scene.
-
Depth of Field
- The in-focus range of a lens or optical system. It is measured from
the distance behind an object to the distance in front of the object
when the viewing lens shows the object to be in focus.
-
Depth of Focus
- The range of sensor-to-lens distance for which the image formed by
the lens is clearly focused.
-
Digital Signal Processing
- An algorithm within the camera that digitizes data (the image). Examples
include automatic compensate for backlight interference, color balance
variations and corrections related to aging of electrical components
or lighting. Functions such as electronic pan and zoom, image annotation,
compression of the video for network transmission, feature extraction
and motion compensation can be easily and inexpensively added to the
camera feature set.
-
Distortion
- The deviation of the received signal waveform from that of the original
transmitted waveform.
-
Distribution Amplifier
- A device that provides several isolated outputs from one looping or
bridging input, and has a sufficiently high input impedance and input-to-output
isolation to prevent loading of the input source.
-
Dynamic Range
- The difference between the maximum acceptable signal level and the
minimum acceptable signal level.
-
EIA Sync
- The signal used for the synchronizing of scanning specified in EIA
Standards RS-170, RS-330, RS-343, or subsequent issues.
-
Equalizer
- An electronic circuit that introduces compensation for frequency discriminative
effects of elements within the television system, particularly long
coaxial transmission systems.
-
Fiber Optics
- Also called optical fibers or optical fiber bundles. An assemblage
of transparent glass fibers all bundled together parallel to one another.
The length of each fiber is much greater than its diameter. This bundle
of fibers has the ability to transmit a picture from one of its surfaces
to the other around curves and into otherwise inaccessible places with
an extremely low loss of definition and light, by a process of total
reflection.
-
Field
- One of the two equal but vertically separated parts into which a television
frame is divided in an interlaced system of scanning. A period of 1/60
second separates each field start time.
-
Field of View
- The maximum angle of view that can be seen through a lens or optical
instrument.
-
Focal Length
- Of a lens, the distance from the focal point to the principal point
of the lens.
-
Focal Plane
- A plane (through the focal point) at right angles to the principal
point of the lens.
-
Focal Point
- The point at which a lens or mirror will focus parallel incident radiation.
-
Footcandle
- See lumen/ft 2.
-
Footlambert (FL)
- A unit of luminance equal to 1/candela per square foot or to the uniform
luminance at a perfectly diffusing surface emitting or reflecting light
at the rate of one lumen per square foot. A lumen per square foot is
a unit of incident light and a footlambert is a unit of emitted or reflected
light. For a perfectly reflecting and perfectly diffusing surface, the
number of lumens per square foot is equal to the number of footlamberts.
-
Frame
- The total area, occupied by the television picture, which is scanned
while the picture signal is not blanked.
-
Frame Frequency
- The number of times per second that the frame is scanned. The U.S.
standard is 30 frames per second.
-
Frame Transfer
- A CCD imager where an entire matrix of pixels is read into storage
before being output from the camera. Differs from Interline Transfer
where lines of pixels are output
-
Frequency Interlace
- The method by which color and black and white sideband signals are
interwoven within the same channel bandwidth.
-
Frequency Response
- The range of band of frequencies to which a unit of electronic equipment
will offer essentially the same characteristics.
-
Front Porch
- The portion of a composite picture signal which lies between the leading
edge of the horizontal blanking pulse and the leading edge of the corresponding
sync pulse.
-
f/Stop
- Also called F Number and F System. Refers to the speed or ability
of a lens to pass light. It is calculated by dividing the focal length
of the lens by its diameter.
-
Gain
- An increase in voltage or power, usually expressed in dB.
-
Gamma
- A numerical value, or the degree of contrast in a television picture,
which is the exponent of that power law which is used to approximate
the curve of output magnitude versus input magnitude over the region
of interest.
-
Gamma Correction
- To provide for a linear transfer characteristic from input to output
device.
-
Genlock
- A device used to lock the frequency of an internal sync generator
to an external source.
-
Ghost
- A spurious image resulting from an echo.
-
Gray Scale
- Variations in value from white, through shades of gray, to black on
a television screen. The gradations approximate the tonal values of
the original image picked up by the TV camera.
-
Hue
- Corresponds to colors such as red, blue, etcetera.
-
Hum
- Electrical disturbance at the power supply frequency or harmonics
thereof.
-
Image Intensifier
- A device coupled by fiber optics to a TV image pickup sensor to increase
sensitivity. Can be single or multi stage.
-
Image Plane
- The plane at right angles to the optical axis at the image point.
-
Impedance (input or output)
- The input or output characteristic of a system component that determines
the type of transmission cable to be used. The cable used must have
the same characteristic impedance as the component. Expressed in ohms.
Video distribution has standardized on 75-ohm coaxial and 124-ohm balanced
cable.
-
Incident Light
- The light that falls directly on an object.
-
Insertion Loss
- The signal strength loss when a piece of equipment is inserted into
a line.
-
Interference
- Extraneous energy which tends to interfere with the reception of the
desired signals.
-
Interline Transfer
- A technology of CCD design, where rows of pixels are output from the
camera. The sensor's active pixel area and storage register are both
contained within the active image area. This differs from "frame transfer"
cameras that move all active pixels to a storage register outside of
the active area.
-
Interlaced Scanning
- A scanning process for reducing image flicker in which the distance
from center to center of successively scanned lines is two or more times
the nominal line width, and in which the adjacent lines belong to different
fields.
-
Iris
- An adjustable aperture built into a camera lens to permit control
of the amount of light passing through the lens.
-
Isolation Amplifier
- An amplifier with input circuitry and output circuitry designed to
eliminate the effects of changes made at either upon the other.
-
Jitter
- Small, rapid variations in a waveform due to mechanical disturbances
or to changes in the characteristic of components. Supply voltages,
imperfect synchronizing signals, circuits, etc.
-
Lens
- A transparent optical component consisting of one or more pieces of
optical glass with surfaces so curved (usually Spherical), that they
serve to converge or diverge the transmitted rays of an object, thus
forming a real or virtual image of that object.
-
Lens Preset Positioning
- Follower Pots are installed on lens that allows feedback to the controller
information relevant to zoom and focus positioning allowing the controller
to quickly adjust to a preselected scene and arrive in focus at the
proper focal length automatically.
-
Lens Speed
- Refers to the ability of a lens to transmit light, represented as
the ratio of the focal length to the diameter of the lens. A fast lens
would be rated <f/1.4; a much slower lens might be designated as>
f/8. The larger the f number, the slower the lens.
-
Light
- Electromagnetic radiation detectable by the eye, ranging in wavelength
from about 400 to 750 nm.
-
Line Amplifier
- An amplifier for audio or video signals that feeds a transmission
line; also called program amplifier.
-
Loop Through
- Also called looping. The method of feeding a series of high impedance
circuits (such as multiple monitor/displays in parallel) from a pulse
or video source with a coax transmission line in such a manner that
the line is bridged (with minimum length stubs) and that the last unit
properly terminates the line in its characteristic impedance. This minimizes
discontinuities or reflections on the transmission line.
-
Loss
- A reduction in signal level or strength, usually expressed in dB.
Power dissipation serving no useful purpose.
-
Low-Frequency Distortion
- Distortion effects which occur at low frequencies. In television,
generally considered as any frequency below the 15.75-kHz line frequency.
-
Lumen (LM)
- The unit of luminous flux. It is equal to the flux through a unit
solid angle (steradian) from a uniform point source of one candela or
to the flux on a unit surface of which all points are at a unit distance
from a uniform point source of one candela.
-
Lumen/FT2
- A unit of incident light. It is the illumination on a surface one
square foot in area on which a flux of one lumen is uniformly distributed,
or the illumination at a surface all points of which are at a distance
of one foot from a uniform source of one candela.
-
Luminance
- Luminous intensity (photometric brightness) of any surface in a given
direction per unit of projected area of the surface as viewed from that
direction, measured in footlamberts (fl).
-
Luminance Signal
- That portion of the NTSC color television signal which contains the
luminance or brightness information.
-
Lux
- International System (Sl) unit of illumination in which the meter
is the unit of length. One lux equals one lumen per square meter.
-
Matrix Switcher
- A combination or array of electromechanical or electronic switches
which route a number of signal sources to one or more designations.
-
Modulation
- The process, or results of the process, whereby some characteristic
of one signal is varied in accordance with another signal. The modulated
signal is called the carrier. The carrier may be modulated in three
fundamental ways: by varying the amplitude, called amplitude modulation;
by varying the frequency, called frequency modulation; by varying the
phase, called phase modulation.
-
Monitor
- A unit of equipment that displays on the face of a picture tube the
images detected and transmitted by a television camera.
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Monochrome
- Black and white with all shades of gray.
-
Monochrome Signal
- In monochrome television, a signal wave for controlling the brightness
values in the picture. In color television, that part of the signal
wave which has major control of the brightness values of the picture,
whether displayed in color or in monochrome.
-
Monochrome Transmission
- The transmission of a signal wave which represents the brightness
values in the picture, but not the color (chrominance) values.
-
ND Filter
- A filter that attenuates light evenly over the visible light spectrum.
It reduces the light entering a lens, thus forcing the iris to open
to its maximum.
-
Noise
- The word "noise" originated in audio practice and refers to random
spurts of electrical energy or interference. In some cases, it will
produce a "salt-and-pepper" pattern over the televised picture. Heavy
noise is sometimes referred to as "snow".
-
Non-Composite Video
- A video signal containing all information except sync.
-
NTSC
- Abbreviation for National Television Systems Committee. A committee
that worked with the FCC in formulating standards for the present day
United States color television system.
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Output
- The signal level at the output of an amplifier or other device.
-
Pan and Tilt
- A device upon which a camera can be mounted that allows movement in
both the azimuth (pan) and in the vertical plane (tilt).
-
Pan/Tilt Preset Positioning
- Follower pots are installed on pan/tilt unit to allow feedback to
the controller and provides information relevant to horizontal and vertical
positioning, allowing the controller to quickly adjust to a pre-selected
scene automatically.
-
Patch Panel
- A panel where circuits are terminated and facilities provided for
interconnecting between circuits by means of jacks and plugs.
-
Peak Pulse Amplitude
- The maximum absolute peak value of a pulse, excluding those portions
considered to be unwanted, such as spikes.
-
Peak-to-Peak
- The amplitude (voltage) difference between the most positive and the
most negative excursions (peaks) of an electrical signal. A full video
signal measures one volt peak to peak.
-
Picture Element
- See Pixel
-
Pixel
- Short for Picture Element. A pixel is the smallest area of a television
picture capable of being delineated by an electrical signal passed through
the system of part thereof. The number of picture elements (pixels)
in a complete picture, and their geometric characteristics of vertical
height and horzontal width, provide information on the total amount
of detail which the raster can display and on the sharpness of the detail,
respectively.
-
Primary Colors
- Three colors wherein no mixture of any two can produce the third.
In color television these are the additive primary colors red, blue
and green.
-
Progressive Scan
- The progressive scan format outputs data from the camera (the signal)
in sequential order as it is scanned. The scan format produces a full
frame of video in a continuous stream, rather than half the image per
output sequence in traditional RS-170 CCD cameras. Standard RS-170 video
is interlaced and output in two separate fields, generating essentially
half the image at a time. With Cohu's new 6600 Series Progressive Scan
Camera, a new, full image is output from the camera every 1/60th second,
making it ideal for machines to more quickly process and display information,
or act according to programmed instructions.
-
Resolution (horizontal)
- The amount of resolvable detail in the horizontal direction in a picture.
It is usually expressed as the number of distinct vertical lines, alternately
black and white, which can be seen in a distance equal to picture height.
-
Resolution, Limiting
- The details that can be distinguished on the television screen. Vertical
resolution refers to the number of horizontal black and white lines
that can be resolved in the picture height. Horizontal resolution refers
to the black and white lines resolved in a dimension equal to the vertical
height and may be limited by the video amplifier bandwidth.
-
Resolution (vertical)
- The amount of resolvable detail in the vertical direction in a picture.
It is usually expressed as the number of distinct horizontal lines,
alternately black and white, which can theoretically be seen in a picture.
-
Retained Image
- Also called image burn. A change produced in or on the target which
remains for a large number of frames after the removal of a previously
stationary light image and which yields a spurious electrical signal
corresponding to that light image.
-
RF (Radio Frequency)
- A frequency at which coherent electromagnetic radiation of energy
is useful for communication purposes. Also, the entire range of such
frequencies.
-
Ripple
- Amplitude variations in the output voltage of a power supply caused
by insufficient filtering.
-
Roll
- A loss of vertical synchronization which causes the picture to move
up or down on a receiver or monitor.
-
Saturation
- In color, the degree to which a color is diluted with white light
or is pure. The vividness of a color, described by such terms as bright,
deep, pastel, pale, etc. Saturation is directly related to the amplitude
of the chrominance signal.
-
Scanning
- The process of moving the electron beam of a pickup tube or a picture
tube across the target or screen area of a tube.
-
Sensitivity
- In television, a factor expressing the incident illumination upon
a specified scene required to produce a specified picture signal at
the output terminals of a television camera.
-
Shutter
- Ability to control the integration (of light) time to the sensor to
less than 1/60 second; e.g: stop motion of moving traffic.
-
Signal-to-Noise Ratio
- The ratio between useful television signal and disturbing noise or
snow.
-
Snow
- Heavy random noise.
-
Spike
- A transient of short duration, comprising part of a pulse, during
which the amplitude considerably exceeds the average amplitude of the
pulse.
-
Standard Minimum Signal
- 1000 microvolts at 75 ohms (0dB mV) in RF systems; 0.7-VPP non-composite,
1-VPP composite in video systems.
-
Sync
- A contraction of "synchronous" or "synchronize".
-
Sync Generator
- A device for generating a synchronizing signal.
-
Sync Level
- The level of the peaks of the synchronizing signal.
-
Sync Signal
- The signal employed for the synchronizing of scanning.
-
Synchronizing
- Maintaining two or more scanning processes in phase.
-
Tearing
- A term used to describe a picture condition in which groups of horizontal
lines are displaced in an irregular manner.
-
Test Pattern
- A chart especially prepared for checking overall performance of a
television system. It contains various combinations of lines and geometric
shapes. The camera is focused on the chart, and the pattern is viewed
at the monitor for fidelity.
-
Transients
- Signals which exist for a brief period of time prior to the attainment
of a steady-state condition. These may include overshoots, damped sinusoidal
waves, etc.
-
Vertical Resolution
- The number of horizontal lines that can be seen in the reproduced
image of a television pattern.
-
Video Amplifier
- A wideband amplifier used for passing picture signals.
-
Video Band
- The frequency band width utilized to transmit a composite video signal.
-
Video Signal (Non-Composite)
- The picture signal. A signal containing visual information and horizontal
and vertical blanking (see also Composite Video Signal) but not sync.
-
Y Signal
- A signal transmitted in color television containing brightness information.
This signal produces a black and white picture on a standard monochrome
receiver. In a color picture it supplies fine detail and brightness
information.
-
Zoom
- To enlarge or reduce, on a continuously variable basis, the size of
a televised image primarily by varying lens focal length.
-
Zoom Lens
- An optical system of continuously variable focal length, the focal
plane remaining in a fixed position.
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