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Analog signal

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An analog signal (American English) or analogue signal (British and Commonwealth English) is any continuous-time signal representing some other quantity, i.e., analogous to another quantity. For example, in an analog audio signal, the instantaneous signal voltage varies continuously with the pressure of the sound waves.[1]

In contrast, a digital signal represents the original time-varying quantity as a sampled sequence of quantized values. Digital sampling imposes some bandwidth and dynamic range constraints on the representation and adds quantization error.[citation needed]

The term analog signal usually refers to electrical signals; however, mechanical, pneumatic, hydraulic, and other systems may also convey or be considered analog signals.

Representation

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An analog signal uses some property of the medium to convey the signal's information. For example, an aneroid barometer uses rotary position as the signal to convey pressure information. In an electrical signal, the voltage, current, or frequency of the signal may be varied to represent the information.[citation needed]

Any information may be conveyed by an analog signal; such a signal may be a measured response to changes in a physical variable, such as sound, light, temperature, position, or pressure. The physical variable is converted to an analog signal by a transducer. For example, sound striking the diaphragm of a microphone induces corresponding fluctuations in the current produced by a coil in an electromagnetic microphone or the voltage produced by a condenser microphone. The voltage or the current is said to be an analog of the sound.[citation needed]

Noise

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An analog signal is subject to electronic noise and distortion introduced by communication channels, recording and signal processing operations, which can progressively degrade the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). As the signal is transmitted, copied, or processed, the unavoidable noise introduced in the signal path will accumulate as a generation loss, progressively and irreversibly degrading the SNR, until in extreme cases, the signal can be overwhelmed. Noise can show up as hiss and intermodulation distortion in audio signals, or snow in video signals. Generation loss is irreversible as there is no reliable method to distinguish the noise from the signal.[citation needed]

Converting an analog signal to digital form introduces a low-level quantization noise into the signal due to finite resolution of digital systems.[2] Once in digital form, the signal can be transmitted, stored, and processed without introducing additional noise or distortion using error detection and correction.

Noise accumulation in analog systems can be minimized by electromagnetic shielding, balanced lines, low-noise amplifiers and high-quality electrical components.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Ferguson, Stuart; Hebels, Rodney (2003). "Communications and networking". Computers for Librarians. pp. 197–226. doi:10.1016/B978-1-876938-60-4.50013-6. ISBN 978-1-876938-60-4.
  2. ^ "What is quantization error and how does signal to noise relate to this?". Tektronix.

Further reading

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  • Leach, W.M. (October 1994). "Fundamentals of low-noise analog circuit design". Proceedings of the IEEE. 82 (10): 1515–1538. doi:10.1109/5.326411.
  • Pawelczyk, M. (March 2009). "Analog Active Control of Acoustic Noise at a Virtual Location". IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology. 17 (2): 465–472. doi:10.1109/TCST.2008.2000988.
  • Muncy, Neil (1995). "Noise susceptibility in analog and digital signal processing systems". Journal of the Audio Engineering Society. 43 (6): 435–453. INIST 3575490.