Analog signal
An analog or analogue signal is any variable signal continuous in both time and amplitude. It differs from a digital signal in that small fluctuations in the signal are meaningful. Analog is usually thought of in an electrical context, however mechanical, pneumatic, hydraulic, and other systems may also use analog signals.
Related Topics:
Continuous - Digital signal - Electrical
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The word "analog" implies an analogy between cause and effect, voltage in and voltage out, current in and current out, sound in and frequency out.
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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. Electrically, the property most commonly used is voltage followed closely by frequency, current, and charge.
Related Topics:
Aneroid barometer - Voltage - Frequency - Current - Charge
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Any information may be conveyed by an analog signal, often such a signal is a measured response to changes in physical phenomena, such as sound, light, temperature, position, or pressure, and is achieved using a transducer.
Related Topics:
Response - Sound - Light - Temperature - Position - Pressure - Transducer
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For example, in an analog sound recording, the variation in pressure of a sound striking a microphone creates a corresponding variation in the current passing through it. An increase in the volume of the sound causes the fluctuation of the current to increase while keeping the same rhythm.
Related Topics:
Pressure - Sound - Microphone
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The primary disadvantage of analog signalling is that any system has noise—that is, random variations—in it. As the signal is copied and re-copied, or transmitted over long distances, these random variations become dominant. Electrically these losses are lessened by shielding, good connections, and several cable types such as coax and twisted pair.
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The effects of noise make signal loss and distortion impossible to recover, since amplifying the signal to recover attenuated parts of the signal amplifies the noise as well.
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Another method of conveying an analog signal is to use modulation. In this, some base signal (e.g., a sinusoidal carrier wave) has one of its properties altered: amplitude modulation involves altering the amplitude of a sinusoidal voltage waveform by the source information, frequency modulation changes the frequency. Other techniques, such as changing the phase of the base signal also work.
Related Topics:
Modulation - Sinusoidal - Carrier wave - Amplitude modulation - Wave - Frequency modulation - Frequency - Phase
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Analog circuits do not involve quantisation of information into digital format. The concept being measured over the circuit, whether sound, light, pressure, temperature, or an exceeded limit, remains from end to end.
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Clocks with hands are called analog; those that display digits are called digital. However, many analog clocks are actually digital since the hands do not move in a smooth continuous motion, but in small steps every second or half a second, or every minute with a loud CLUNK.
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See digital for a discussion of digital vs. analog.
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Sources: Some of an earlier version of this article was originally taken from Federal Standard 1037C in support of MIL-STD-188.
Related Topics:
Federal Standard 1037C - MIL-STD-188
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