National Instruments NI 5911 User Manual

Page 39

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Glossary

NI 5911 User Manual

G-6

ni.com

N

noise

an undesirable electrical signal—noise comes from external sources such
as the AC power line, motors, generators, transformers, fluorescent lights,
soldering irons, CRT displays, computers, electrical storms, welders, radio
transmitters, and internal sources such as semiconductors, resistors, and
capacitors. Noise corrupts signals you are trying to send or receive.

Nyquist frequency

a frequency that is one-half the sampling rate. See also Nyquist Sampling
Theorem.

Nyquist Sampling
Theorem

the theorem states that if a continuous bandwidth-limited analog signal
contains no frequency components higher than half the frequency at which
it is sampled, then the original signal can be recovered without distortion.

O

Ohm’s Law

(R=V/I)—the relationship of voltage to current in a resistance

overrange

a segment of the input range of an instrument outside of the normal
measuring range. Measurements can still be made, usually with a
degradation in specifications.

oversampling

sampling at a rate greater than the Nyquist frequency

P

passband

the frequency range that a filter passes without attenuation

PCI

Peripheral Component Interconnect—a high-performance expansion bus
architecture originally developed by Intel to replace ISA and EISA; it is
achieving widespread acceptance as a standard for PCs and workstations
and offers a theoretical maximum transfer rate of 132 Mbytes/s

peak value

the absolute maximum or minimum amplitude of a signal (AC + DC)

posttriggering

the technique to acquire a programmed number of samples after trigger
conditions are met

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