A
Absorption: Reduction of acoustical energy usually by
converting it into heat via friction using soft, fibrous
materials.
AC3: Audio Codec 3. This was the original and more
technical name for Dolby Digital. Replaced by marketing
mavens when they realized that Dolby's name was not in the
title. Some RF modulated, 5.1-encoded laser discs were
labeled as AC3. Later versions were labeled as Dolby
Digital.
Academy Curve: An intentional roll-off in a
theatrical system's playback response above ~2kHz (to -18dB
at 8kHz) to minimize noise in mono optical tracks. Some
(many) transfers to home video of mono movies have neglected
to add the Academy filter during transfer, giving many old
movies a screechy sound they were never intended to have. A
few home processors have an Academy filter option, making
them a must for old-movie buffs. Has been used since 1938.
Acoustic Suspension: A sealed speaker enclosure
that uses the air trapped in the cabinet as a reinforcing
spring to help control the motion of the woofer(s).
Active: Powered. An active cross-over is
electrically powered and divides the line-level signal prior
to amplification. An active speaker includes an active
crossover and built-in amplifier.
Amplifier: A component that increases the gain or
level of an audio signal.
AM: Amplitude modulated.
Anamorphic: Process that horizontally condenses
(squeezes) a 16:9 image into a 4:3 space, preserving 25
percent more vertical resolution than letterboxing into the
4:3 space. For the signal to appear with correct geometry,
the display must either horizontally expand or vertically
squish the image. Used on about two or three promotional
laser discs and many DVDs. Also called Enhanced for
Widescreen or Enhanced for 16:9.
Aspect Ratio: The ratio of image width to image
height. Common motion-picture ratios are 1.85:1 and 2.35:1.
Television screens are usually 1.33:1 (also known as 4:3),
which is similar to the Academy standard for films in the
'50s. HDTV is 1.78:1, or 16:9. When widescreen movies (films
with aspect ratios wider than 1.33:1) are displayed on
1.33:1 televisions, the image must be letterboxed,
anamorphically squeezed, or panned-and-scanned to fit the
screen.
ATSC: Advanced Television Systems Committee.
Government-directed committee that developed our digital
television transmission system.
Attenuate: To turn down, reduce, decrease the
level of; the opposite of boost.
A-Weighting: Measurement based roughly on the
uneven frequency sensitivity of the human ear. The
influences of low and high frequencies are reduced in
comparison to midrange frequencies because people are most
sensitive to midrange sounds.
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B
Balanced Input: A connection with three conductors:
two identical signal conductors that are 180 degrees out of
phase with each other, and one ground. This type of
connection is very resistant to line noise.
Bandpass: A two-part filter that cuts both higher
and lower frequencies around a center band. A bandpass
enclosure cuts high frequencies by acoustic cancellation and
low frequencies by natural physical limitations on bass
response.
Bandwidth: In audio, the range of frequencies a
device operates within. In video, the range of frequencies
passed from the input to the output.
Bass: Low frequencies; those below approximately
200 Hz.
Bass Reflex: See Port.
Bipolar: 1) The condition of possessing two pole
sets. In a conventional (non-FET) transistor, one pole set
exists between the base and collector, and the other pole
set exists between the base and emitter. 2) Speakers that
consist of two driver arrays facing opposite directions and
wired in electrical phase with one another to create a more
diffuse soundstage.
Bi-Wiring: A method of connecting an amplifier or
receiver to a speaker in which separate wires are run
between the amp and the woofer and the amp and the tweeter.
Black Level: Light level of the darker portions of
a video image. A black level control sets the light level of
the darkest portion of the video signal to match that of the
display's black level capability. Black is, of course, the
absence of light. Many displays, however, have as much
difficulty shutting off the light in the black portions of
an image as they do creating light in the brighter portions.
CRT-based displays usually have better black levels than
DLP, plasma, and LCD, which rank, generally, in that order.
Boost: To increase, make louder or brighter;
opposite of attenuate.
Bridging: Combining two channels of an amplifier
to make one channel that's more powerful. One channel
amplifies the positive portion of an audio signal and the
other channel amplifies the negative portion, which are then
combined at the output.
Brightness: For video, the overall light level of
the entire image. A brightness control makes an image
brighter; however, when it is combined with a contrast, or
white level control, the brightness control is best used to
define the black level of the image (see Black Level). For
audio, something referred to as bright has too much treble
or high-frequency sound.
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C
Cascading Crossovers: Two crossovers used in series
on the same signal in the same frequency range causing
greater attenuation of the out-of-band signal. For example,
using the crossover in a receiver's bass management setting
and the one in a subwoofer simultaneously will create an
exaggerated loss of signal.
Cathode Ray Tube: (CRT) Analog display device that
generates an image on a layer of phosphors that are driven
by an electron gun.
CD: Compact Disc. Ubiquitous digital audio format.
Uses 16-bit/44.1-kHz sampling rate PCM digital signal to
encode roughly 74 or 80 minutes of two-channel, full-range
audio onto a 5-inch disc.
CD-R: Recordable Compact Disc
CD-RW: Rewritable Compact Disc
CEA: Consumer Electronics Association. An
association of manufacturers of consumer electronics
products.
C.E.D.I.A.:
The Custom Electronic Design & Installation Association
(CEDIA) is a global trade association of companies that
specialize in planning and installing electronic systems for
the home. These systems include home networking, home
automation and communication systems, media rooms, single or
multi-room entertainment systems, and integrated whole-house
subsystems providing control of lighting, security and HVAC
systems. The association was founded in September 1989 and
has a total membership of approximately 2,200 member
companies.
Center Channel: The center speaker in a home
theater setup. Ideally placed within one or two feet above
or below the horizontal plane of the left and right speakers
and above or below the display device, unless placed behind
a perforated screen. Placement is important, as voices and
many effects in a multichannel mix come from this speaker.
Channel: In components and systems, a channel is a
separate signal path. A four-channel amplifier has at least
four separate inputs and four separate outputs.
Chrominance: (C) The color portion of a video
signal.
Coaxial: 1) A speaker typically with one driver in
the middle of, and on the same axis as, another driver. 2)
An audio or video cable with a single center pin that acts
as the hot lead and an outer shield that acts as a ground.
Codec: Mathematical algorithms used to compress
large data signals into small spaces with minimal perceived
loss of information.
Coloration: Any change in the character of sound
(such as an overemphasis on certain tones) that reduces
naturalness.
Component Video: A signal that's recorded or
transmitted in its separate components. Typically refers to
Y/Pb/Pr, which consists of three 75-ohm channels: one for
luminance information, and two for color. Compared with an
S-video signal, a Y/Pb/Pr signal carries more color detail.
HDTV, DVD, and DBS are component video sources, though most
DBS material is transcoded to component from composite
signals.
Compound Loading: See Isobarik.
Composite Video: A signal that contains both
chrominance and luminance on the same 75-ohm cable. Used in
nearly all consumer video devices. Chrominance is carried in
a 3.58-mHz sideband and filtered out by the TV's notch or
comb filter. Poor filtering can result in dot crawl, hanging
dots, or other image artifacts.
Contrast: Relative difference between the
brightest and darkest parts of an image. A contrast control
adjusts the peak white level of a display device.
Controller: Generic term that typically refers to
a combination preamp/surround processor or receiver. Can
also refer to a handheld wireless remote.
Crossover: A component that divides an audio
signal into two or more ranges by frequency, sending, for
example, low frequencies to one output and high frequencies
to another. An active crossover is powered and divides the
line-level audio signal prior to amplification. A passive
crossover uses no external power supply and may be used
either at line level or, more commonly, at speaker level to
divide the signal after amplification and send the low
frequencies to the woofer and the high frequencies to the
tweeter.
Crossover Frequency: The frequency at which an
audio signal is divided. 80 Hz is a typical subwoofer
crossover point and is the recommended crossover point in
theatrical and home THX systems. Frequencies below 80 Hz are
sent to the subwoofer; signals above 80 Hz are sent to the
main speakers.
Crossover Slope: The rate of attenuation expressed
in decibels of change for every octave away from the
crossover frequency.
CRT: See Cathode Ray Tube.
Cut: To reduce, lower; opposite of boost.
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D
Damping: Of or pertaining to the control of vibration
by electrical or mechanical means.
Damping Material: Any material that absorbs sound
waves and eliminates acoustic energy by converting it into a
different form. Fibrous material, for example, turns
acoustic energy into heat via friction.
D'Appolito: Vertically symmetrical driver array.
Typically consists of a tweeter mounted between two woofers.
Creates a more-vertically directional sound with evenly
spaced lobes in the off-axis response when compared with
asymmetrical driver arrays.
DBS: Direct Broadcast Satellite. Term that
replaced DSS to describe small-dish, digital satellite
systems such as DirecTV and Dish Network.
Decibel (dB): A logarithmic measurement unit that
describes a sound's relative loudness, though it can also be
used to describe the relative difference between two power
levels. A decibel is one tenth of a Bel. In sound, decibels
generally measure a scale from 0 (the threshold of hearing)
to 120-140 dB (the threshold of pain). A 3dB difference
equates to a doubling of power. A 10dB difference is
required to double the subjective volume. A 1dB difference
over a broad frequency range is noticeable to most people,
while a 0.2dB difference can affect the subjective
impression of a sound.
Delay: The time difference between a sonic event
and its perception at the listening position (sound
traveling through space is delayed according to the distance
it travels). People perceive spaciousness by the delay
between the arrival of direct and reflected sound (larger
spaces cause longer delays).
Diaphragm: The part of a dynamic loudspeaker
attached to the voice coil that produces sound. It usually
has the shape of a cone or dome.
Diffusion: In audio, the scattering of sound
waves, reducing the sense of localization. In video, the
scattering of light waves, reducing hot spotting, as in a
diffusion screen.
Diffusor: Acoustical treatment device that
preserves sound energy by reflecting it evenly in multiple
directions, as opposed to a flat surface, which reflects a
majority of the sound energy in one direction.
Digital Theater Systems: See DTS.
Digital Audio Server: Essentially a hard drive, a
digital audio server stores compressed audio files (like MP3
or WMA). Most include the processing to make the files, and
all have the ability to play them back.
D-ILA: Direct Drive Image Light Amplifier. This
Hughes/JVC technology uses a reflective LCD to create an
image. A light source is then reflected off the reflective
LCD and is directed through a lens to a screen.
Dipole: Speakers with drivers on opposite faces
that are wired electrically out of phase, creating an area
of cancellation to the sides. Recommended by THX for use as
surround speakers, with null directed at the listener to
create a more ambient and non-localizable effect.
Direct-Stream Digital: A format for encoding
high-resolution audio signals. It uses a 1-bit encoder with
a sampling rate of 2,822,400 samples per second (verses
44,100 for CD). Used to encode six high-resolution channels
on SACD.
Direct-View Television: Display whose image is
created on the surface from which it is viewed.
Dispersion: The spread of sound over a wide area.
Distortion: Any undesired change in an audio
signal between input and the output.
DLP: Digital Light Processing. A Texas Instruments
process of projecting video images using a light source
reflecting off of an array of tens of thousands of
microscopic mirrors. Each mirror represents a pixel and
reflects light toward the lens for white and away from it
for black, modulating in between for various shades of gray.
Three-chip versions use separate arrays for the red, green,
and blue colors. Single-chip arrays use a color-filter wheel
that alternates each filter color in front of the mirror
array at appropriate intervals.
DMD: Digital Micromirror Device. Texas Instruments
engine that powers DLP projectors. Uses an array with tens
of thousands of microscopic mirrors that reflect a light
source toward or away from the lens, creating an image. Each
mirror represents a pixel. See DLP.
DNR: Dynamic Noise Reduction. A signal-processing
circuit that attempts to reduce the level of high-frequency
noise. Unlike Dolby NR, DNR doesn't require preprocessing
during recording.
Dolby B: A noise-reduction system that increases
the level of high frequencies during recording and decreases
them during playback.
Dolby C: An improvement on Dolby B that provides
about twice as much noise reduction.
Dolby Digital: An encoding system that digitally
compresses up to 5.1 discrete channels of audio (left front,
center, right front, left surround, right surround, and LFE)
into a single bitstream, which can be recorded onto a DVD,
HDTV broadcast, or other form of digital media. When
RF-modulated, it was included on some laser discs, which
requires an RF-demodulator before the signal can be decoded.
Five channels are full-range; the .1 channel is a
band-limited LFE track. A Dolby Digital processor (found in
most new receivers, preamps, and some DVD players) can
decode this signal back into the 5.1 separate channels. Most
films since 1992's Batman Returns have been recorded in a
5.1 digital format, though a number of films before that had
6-channel analog tracks that have been remastered into 5.1.
Dolby EX: An enhancement to Dolby Digital that
adds a surround back channel to 5.1 soundtracks. The sixth
channel is matrixed from the left and right surround
channels. Often referred to as 6.1. Sometimes referred to as
7.1 if the system uses two surround back speakers, even
though both speakers reproduce the same signal. Software is
backwards-compatible with 5.1 systems, but requires an EX or
6.1 processor to obtain additional benefit.
Dolby Pro Logic: An enhancement of the Dolby
Surround decoding process. Pro Logic decoders derive left,
center, right, and a mono surround channel from two-channel
Dolby SurroundÐencoded material via matrix techniques.
Dolby Pro Logic II: An enhanced version of Pro
Logic. Adds improved decoding for two-channel, non-encoded
soundtracks and music.
Dome: A type of speaker-driver shape; usually used
for tweeters (convex). Concave domes are usually referred to
as "inverted domes."
Dope: A tacky substance added to paper cones to
damp spurious vibrations that can cause breakup and rough
response. Also, see Editor.
Dot Crawl: An artifact of composite video signals
that appears as a moving, zipper-like, vertical border
between colors.
Driver: A speaker without an enclosure; also
refers to the active element of a speaker system that
creates compressions and rarefactions in the air.
DSD: See Direct Stream Digital.
DSP: Digital Signal Processing. Manipulating an
audio signal digitally to create various possible effects at
the output. Often refers to artificially generated surround
effects derived from and applied to two-channel sources.
DTS: Digital Theater Systems. A digital sound
recording format, originally developed for theatrical film
soundtracks, starting with Jurassic Park. Records 5.1
discrete channels of audio onto a handful of laser discs,
CDs, and DVDs. Requires a player with DTS output connected
to a DTS processor.
DTS ES: An enhanced version of the 5.1 DTS system.
Like Dolby's Surround EX, a sixth channel is added. In some
cases (DTS ES Discrete), the sixth channel is discrete.
Software is backwards-compatible with 5.1 systems, but
requires an ES or 6.1 processor to obtain additional
benefit. Neo:6 is a subset of DTS ES that creates 6.1 from
material with fewer original channels.
DTV: Digital Television. Umbrella term used for
the ATSC system that will eventually replace our NTSC system
in 2009. HDTV is a subset of the DTV system. While the FCC
does not recognize specific scan rates in the adopted DTV
system, typically accepted rates include 480i, 480p, 720p,
and 1080i.
D-VHS: Digital VHS. Digital signals recorded onto
magnetic tape. Greater capacity than typical VHS; can record
compressed HDTV signals. See D-Theater
DVD: Officially known as the Digital Video Disc,
though marketers unofficially refer to it as the Digital
Versatile Disc. DVD uses a 5-inch disc with anywhere from
4.5 Gb (single layer, single-sided) to 17 Gb storage
capacity (double-layer, double sided). It uses MPEG2
compression to encode 720:480p resolution, full-motion video
and Dolby Digital to encode 5.1 channels of discrete audio.
The disc can also contain PCM, DTS, and MPEG audio
soundtracks and numerous other features. An audio-only
version, DVD-A uses MLP to encode six channels of
24-bit/96-kHz audio.
DVD-A: Digital Versatile Disc-Audio. Enhanced
audio format with up to six channels of high-resolution,
24-bit/96-kHz audio encoded onto a DVD, usually using MLP
lossless encoding. Requires a DVD-A player and a controller
with 6-channel inputs (or a proprietary digital link) for
full compatibility.
DVD-R: A recordable DVD format similar to CD-R in
that it is a write-once medium. Backed by Pioneer,
Panasonic, Toshiba, and others.
DVD-RW: A recordable DVD format similar to CD-RW
in that it is re-recordable medium. Backed by Pioneer,
Panasonic, Toshiba, and others.
DVD+R: A recordable DVD format similar to CD-R in
that it is a write-once medium. Backed by Sony, Philips,
Yamaha, HP, and others.
DVD+RW: A recordable DVD format similar to CD-RW
in that it is re-recordable medium. Backed by Sony, Philips,
Yamaha, HP, and others.
DVD-RAM: A recordable DVD format similar to DVD-RW
in that it is a re-writeable format. Unlike DVD-RW it is
capable of being written to and erased over 100,000 times.
Backed by Hitachi, Panasonic, Toshiba, and others.
DVI: Digital Visual Interface. Connection standard
developed by Intel for connecting computers to digital
monitors such as flat panels and DLP projectors. A consumer
electronics version, not necessarily compatible with the PC
version, is used as a connection standard for HDTV tuners
and displays. Transmits an uncompressed digital signal to
the display. The latter version uses HDCP copy protection to
prevent unauthorized copying. See also HDMI.
Dynamic Range: The difference between the lowest
and the highest levels; in audio, it's often expressed in
decibels. In video, it's listed as the contrast ratio.
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E
EDTV: Extended Definition Television. This CEA-adopted
term (though originally mentioned in an April '99 HT article
by Mike Wood and Mike McGann) is defined as those products
that can display DTV images as 480p or higher.
Efficiency Rating: Level of sound output measured
at a prescribed distance with a standard input power.
Efficiency rating standard is 1 watt (2.83V at 8 ohms) at 1
meter over a specified frequency range and is measured in
decibels.
Electrostatic: One of the oldest speaker design
principles, electrostatic speakers are generally comprised
of two fixed perforated panels with a constant high-voltage
charge applied to them. In between these two panels is an
extremely low-mass diaphragm to which the audio signal is
applied, causing it to move. There are variations on this
construction, but all electrostatic speakers are free from
the magnets and voice coils used in conventional speakers.
Enclosure: The container of air that surrounds the
rear of a speaker driver.
Enhanced for 16:9: See Anamorphic.
Enhanced for Widescreen: See Anamorphic.
EQ: See Equalization or Equalizer.
Equalization: Loosely, any type of relative
frequency adjustment. Specifically, the process of changing
the frequency balance of an electrical signal to alter the
acoustical output.
Equalizer: A component designed to alter the
frequency balance of an audio signal. Equalizers may be
graphic, parametric, or a combination of both.
EX: See Dolby EX.
External Crossover: A standalone unit. See
crossover.
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F
Feedback: The transmission of current or voltage from
the output of a device back to the input, where it interacts
with the input signal to modify operation of the device.
Feedback is positive when it's in phase with the input and
negative when it's out of phase.
Fiber Optic Cable: Glass, plastic, or hybrid fiber
cable that transmits digital signals as light pulses.
FireWire: See IEEE 1394.
FM: Frequency Modulated.
Frequency: The number of cycles (vibrations) per
second. In audio, audible frequencies commonly range from 20
to 20,000 cycles per second (Hz). In video, frequency is
used to define the image resolution. Low-frequency video
images depict large objects or images. Higher frequencies
depict smaller objects (finer details).
Frequency Response: A measure of what frequencies
can be reproduced and how accurately they are reproduced. A
measurement of 20 to 20,000 Hz ± 3dB means those frequencies
between 20 and 20,000 Hz can be reproduced no more than 3 dB
above or below a reference frequency level.
Full-Range: A speaker designed to reproduce the
full range (20 Hz to 20 kHz) of audio frequencies.
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G
Gain: Increase in level or amplitude.
Graphic Equalizer: A type of equalizer with
sliding controls that create a pattern representing a graph
of the frequency-response changes. Raising sliders boosts
the affected frequencies; lowering sliders cuts (attenuates)
the affected frequencies.
Gray Scale: The ability for a video display to
reproduce a neutral image color with a given input at
various levels of intensity.
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H
Hanging Dots: An artifact of composite video signals
that appears as a stationary, zipper-like, horizontal border
between colors.
HDCP: High-Bandwidth Digital Content Protection.
Created by Intel, HDCP is used with HDTV signals over DVI
and HDMI connections and on D-Theater D-VHS recordings to
prevent unauthorized duplication of copywritten material.
HDR: Hard-Drive Recorder. Device that uses a
computer hard drive to store compressed digital audio and
video signals.
HDMI: HDTV connection format using a DVI interface
that transfers uncompressed digital video with HDCP copy
protection and multichannel audio.
HDTV: High-Definition Television. The
high-resolution subset of our DTV system. The FCC has no
official definition for HDTV. The ATSC defines HDTV as a
16:9 image with twice the horizontal and vertical resolution
of our existing system, accompanied by 5.1 channels of Dolby
Digital audio. The CEA defines HDTV as an image with 720
progressive or 1080 interlaced active (top to bottom) scan
lines. 1280:720p and 1920:1080i are typically accepted as
high-definition scan rates.
Hi-Fi Stereo: Feature found on VCRs that records
or plays back stereo soundtracks with improved fidelity
compared to using the linear stereo tracks.
High Gain Screen: Material that reflects more
light than a reference material. Increases a projector's
light output at the expense of uniformity.
High Pass: A filter that passes high frequencies,
and attenuates low frequencies. Same as low cut.
Home Theater in a Box: A complete home theater
system in one box (or at least sold together as a package).
Consists of five or more speakers, a subwoofer, and a
receiver. May also include a DVD player.
Horn: A type of speaker that looks like a horn.
These speakers have small drivers and very large mouths; the
horn shape serves to transform the small radiating area of
the driver into the much larger radiating area of the mouth
of the horn.
Hz: Hertz or cycles per second. Something that
repeats a cycle once each second moves at a rate of 1 Hz.
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I
IEEE 1394: Networking standard for PCs. Combined with
5C copy protection, is used as a two-way connection to
transfer the MPEG-compressed digital bitstreams between
consumer electronics items, including HDTV tuners and
displays, D-VHS recorders, DVD players, and DBS receivers.
Also called FireWire, iLink, É
iLink: See IEEE 1394.
Integrated Amplifier: A combination preamp and
amplifier.
Interconnects: Any cable or wire running between
two pieces of A/V equipment. For example, RCA terminated
cables connecting pre/pros and amps.
Interlace: Process of alternating scan lines to
create a complete image. In CRT displays, every second
field/frame is scanned between the first field/frame. The
first field represents the odd lines; the second field
represents the even lines. The fields are aligned and timed
so that, with a still image, the human eye blurs the two
fields together and sees them as one. Interlace scanning
allows only half the lines to be transmitted and presented
at any given moment. A 1080i HD signal transmits and
displays only 540 lines per 60th of a second. 480i NTSC
transmits and displays only 240 lines per 60th of a second.
Motion in the image can make the fields noticeable.
Interlaced images have motion artifacts when two fields
don't match to create the complete frame, often most
noticeable in film-based material.
Inverted Dome: A type of speaker-driver shape;
usually used for tweeters (concave).
Imaging: The ability to localize the individual
sound sources in three-dimensional space.
Impedance: A measure of the impediment to the flow
of alternating current, measured in ohms at a given
frequency. Larger numbers mean higher resistance to current
flow.
Isobarik: Also known as compound loading. By using
two low frequency drivers (generally mounted face-to-face
and wired electrically out-of-phase or mounted front-to-back
in a shallow tube and wired electrically in phase) you can
halve the volume of the cabinet without reducing the low
frequency extension of the subwoofer.
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K
Keystone: A form of video image distortion in which
the top of the picture is wider than the bottom, or the left
is taller than the right, or vice versa. The image is shaped
like a trapezoid rather than a rectangle.
kHz: Kilohertz or one thousand Hz.
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L
Laser Disc: Now-defunct 12-inch disc format with
excellent analog, FM-recorded video image, and either analog
or CD-quality PCM-encoded audio. Later discs used one of the
analog channels to record an RF-modulated Dolby Digital/AC3
soundtrack and/or used the PCM tracks to encoded a DTS
soundtrack.
LCD: Liquid Crystal Display. A display that
consists of two polarizing transparent panels and a liquid
crystal surface sandwiched in between. Voltage is applied to
certain areas, causing the crystal to turn dark. A light
source behind the panel transmits through transparent
crystals and is mostly blocked by dark crystals.
LCOS: Liquid Crystal on Silicon
Letterbox: Format used widely on laser disc and
many DVDs to fit wide-aspect-ratio movies (1.85:1 and
2.35:1, for example) into a smaller frame, such as the
1.78:1 area of an anamorphic DVD or the 1.33:1 area of a
laser disc or video tape. The image is shrunk to fit the
screen, leaving blank space on the top and bottom. This
process sacrifices some vertical detail that must be used to
record the black bars.
LFE: Low Frequency Effects track. The .1 channel
of a Dolby Digital, DTS, or SDDS soundtrack. The LFE is
strictly low-frequency information (20 to 120 Hz, with 115
dB of dynamic range) that's added to the soundtrack for
extra effect. This track does not inherently contain all the
bass of the soundtrack.
Line-Level (Low-Level): A level of electrical
signals too low to make the average speaker move
sufficiently. Amplifiers receive line-level signals and
amplify them to speaker level.
LNB: Low-Noise Blocker. The receiving end of a
satellite dish.
Low Pass: A filter that lets low frequencies go
through but doesn't let high frequencies go through. Same as
high cut.
Luminance: The black and white (Y) portion of a
composite, Y/C, or Y/Pb/Pr video signal. The luminance
channel carries the detail of a video signal. The color
channel is laid on top of the luminance signal when creating
a picture. Having a separate luminance channel ensures
compatibility with black-and-white televisions.
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M
Megachanger: CD or DVD player with massive disc
storage capacity, holding 50 or more discs.
MHz: Megahertz, or 1 million Hz.
Midbass: The middle of the bass part of the
frequency range, from approximately 50 to 100 Hz (upper bass
would be from 100 to 200 Hz). Also used as a term for
loudspeaker drivers designed to reproduce both bass and
midrange frequencies.
Midrange: The middle of the audio frequency range.
Also used as a term for loudspeaker drivers designed to
reproduce this range.
MLP: Meridian Lossless Packing. Encoding format
that is able to completely reconstruct the original signal
at the receiving end. No information is lost or discarded,
regardless of how trivial it might be. Used to encode six
channels of high-resolution audio on DVD-A.
Mono: Monophonic sound. One channel.
MP3: MPEG-1 Audio Layer-3. Compression scheme used
to transfer audio files via the Internet and store in
portable players and digital audio servers.
Multiple-Rate Encoding: Instead of locking
encoding at a certain constant data rate, it allows the
codec to choose whatever rate is best for that portion of
the recording. Usually reduces file size with proportionally
less loss in quality.
Multisource: System with multiple sources. Can
also be used to describe a receiver that can provide
multiple different sources into different rooms.
Multiroom: System that provides audio or video to
multiple areas. Usually with only one source.
Multizone: System that provides different sources
into multiple areas simultaneously.
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N
N-curve: See Academy Curve.
Negative Gain Screen: Material that reflects less
light than a reference material. Often used for DLP and LCD
projection systems.
Noise: An unwanted portion of a signal such as
hiss, hum, whine, static, or buzzing.
NTSC: National Television Standards Committee.
Government-directed committee that established the U.S.
color TV standard in 1953. Also known, sarcastically, as
Never Twice the Same Color or Never The Same Color due to
the inherent difficulty in achieving proper color
calibration.
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O
Octave: The difference between two frequencies where
one is twice the other. For example, 200 Hz is an octave
higher than 100 Hz. 400 Hz is one octave higher than 200 hz.
Ohm: A measure of how much something resists
(impedes) the flow of electricity. Larger numbers mean more
resistance.
Optical Digital Cable: Fiber optic cable that
transfers digital audio signals as light pulses.
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P
Passive: Not active. A passive crossover uses no
external power and results in insertion loss. A passive
speaker is one without internal amplification.
Passive Radiator: A radiating surface (usually
similar to a conventional speaker cone) that is not
electrically driven but shares the same air space in a
sealed cabinet with an electrically driven loudspeaker. This
arrangement is functionally similar to a loudspeaker with a
vented (ported) cabinet, with the passive radiator serving
the duties of the air in the port.
Parametric: Equalizer with adjust-able parameters,
such as center frequency and bandwidth (Q), as well as
amplitude.
PCM: See Pulse Code Modulation.
Phase: Time relationship between signals; it's all
relative.
Piezo: A type of speaker driver that creates sound
when a quartz crystal receives electrical energy.
Pixel: Contraction of picture element. The
smallest element of data in a video image.
Plasma: Flat-panel display technology that ignites
small pockets of gas to light phosphors.
Port: An aperture in a loudspeaker enclosure that
helps extend the usable low-frequency output. A ported
enclosure is also called vented or bass reflex.
Power Amp: See Amplifier.
Power Output: A measure, usually in watts, of how
much energy is modulated by a component.
Preamplifier: A control and switching component
that may include equalization functions. The preamp comes in
the signal chain before the amplifiers.
Pre Outs: Connectors that provide a line-level
output of the internal preamp or surround processor.
Pre Outs/Main Ins: Connectors on a receiver that
provide an interruptible signal loop between the output of
the internal preamp or surround processor portion of the
receiver and the input of the amplifier portion of the
receiver.
Pre/Pro: A combination preamp and surround
processor.
Processors: Anything that processes an incoming
signal in some way. Surround processors, for example, can
decode a Dolby Digital signal to send to an amp so you can
hear it.
Progressive Scanning: Each frame of a video image
is scanned complete, from top to bottom, not interlaced. For
example, 480p means that each image frame is made of 480
horizontal lines drawn vertically. Computer images are all
progressively scanned. Requires more bandwidth (twice as
much vertical information) and a faster horizontal scan
frequency than interlaced images of the same resolution.
Projection System: Display that projects image
onto a screen.
Pulse Code Modulation: (PCM) a way to convert
sound or analog information to binary information (0s and
1s) by taking samples of the sound and record the resulting
number as binary information. Used on all CDs, DVD-Audio,
and just about every other digital audio format. It can
sometimes be found on DVD-Video.
PVR: Personal Video Recorder. Marketing term for
Video HDRs. (TIVO, RePlay TV, etc.)
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Q
Q: The magnification or resonance factor of any
resonant device or circuit. Also the width of affected
frequencies in an equalizer. Shaped somewhat like an
adjustable width bell curve.
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R
RCA Jacks: Receptacles for coaxial cables carrying
line-level audio signals. Also called phono-type connectors.
Re-EQ: Short for Re-equalization. A feature found
on THX-certified receivers and pre/pros. Movie soundtracks
are mixed for theaters or far-field monitors with an
expected high-frequency roll-off otherwise known as an
X-curve. If these soundtracks are not re-mixed for home use,
they will sound too bright when played back through home
speakers or near-field monitors. Re-EQ inserts an X-curve
response into the signal to compensate for this, which takes
out some of the soundtrack's excess edginess or brightness.
Rear-Projection Television: Display that projects
an image on the backside of a screen material, usually after
having been reflected off of a mirror.
Receiver: Any component that receives, or tunes,
broadcast signals, be it NTSC, HDTV, DBS, or AM/FM radio.
Typically refers to the single component that includes a
preamp, surround processor, multichannel amplifier, and
AM/FM tuner.
Resonant Frequency: The frequency at which any
system vibrates naturally when excited by a stimulus. A
tuning fork, for example, resonates at a specific frequency
when struck.
Reverberation: The reflections of sound within a
closed space.
Reverberation Time: The amount of time it takes
the reverberation to decay 60 dB from the level of the
original sound.
RF: Radio Frequency. Television signals are
modulated onto RF signals and are then demodulated by your
television's tuner. VCRs and DBS receivers often include
channel 3 or 4 modulators, allowing the output signal to be
tuned by the television on those channels. Also, laser discs
used an RF signal for modulating Dolby Digital 5.1
soundtracks on some movies. This requires an RF demodulator
(usually referred to as an AC3-RF demodulator) before or in
the surround processor to decode the signal.
RGB: Red, Green, Blue. Can refer to an unprocessed
video signal or the color points of a display device.
Together these three colors make up every color seen on a
display device.
Ribbon Speaker: A loudspeaker that consists of a
thin, corrugated, metallic ribbon suspended in a magnetic
field. The ribbon acts electrically like a low-impedance
voice coil and mechanically as a diaphragm.
RMS: Root Mean Square or the square root of the
arithmetic mean (average) of the square's set of values. A
reasonably accurate method of describing an amplifier's
power output.
RPTV: Rear-Projection Television
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S
SACD: Super Audio CD. Enhanced audio format with up
to six channels of high-resolution audio encoded using DSD.
Requires an SACD player. Multichannel also requires a
controller with six-channel analog or proprietary digital
inputs for full playback.
Sampling Frequency: How often a digital sample is
taken of an analog wave. The more samples taken, the more
accurate the recording will be. You need to sample at a
minimum of twice the highest frequency you want to capture.
For example, the 44.1-kilohertz sampling rate of a CD cannot
record sounds higher than 22.05 kilohertz.
Scan Lines: The lines drawn by an electron gun in
a CRT system to make up the picture. Drawn horizontally,
from left to right, starting at the top left and working to
the bottom right.
SDTV: Standard Definition Television. Lower
resolution subset of the ATSC's DTV system. 480i is
typically accepted as an SD signal. Digital broadcasters can
offer multiple sub-programs at SDTV quality, as opposed to
one or two HD programs. Digital satellite and digital cable
often refer to the majority of their programs as SDTV,
somewhat erroneously, as neither system has anything to do
with DTV, though both, technically, consist of a digital
480i signal.
Sealed: See Acoustic Suspension.
Sensitivity: A measurement (in dB) of the
sound-pressure level over a specified frequency range
created by a speaker driven by 1 watt (2.83V at 8 ohms) of
power with a microphone placed 1 meter away.
Signal-to-Noise Ratio: A comparison of the signal
level relative to the noise level. Larger numbers are
better.
Soft-Dome Tweeter: A tweeter that uses a soft
fabric or plastic dome as the radiating diaphragm.
Soundfield: The total acoustical characteristics
of a space, such as ambience; number, timing, and relative
level of reflections; ratio of direct to reflected sound;
RT-60 time; etc.
Soundstage: The area between two speakers that
appears to the listener to be occupied by sonic images. Like
a real stage, a soundstage should have width, depth, and
height.
Source: A component from which the system's
signals originate. DVD player, AM/FM tuners, and VCRs are
sources.
Speaker: A component that converts electrical
energy into acoustical energy.
Spider: Part of a loudspeaker driver's suspension
that helps center the diaphragm and returns it to rest after
being moved by an energized voice coil.
SPL: Sound-Pressure Level. Measured in dB.
Subwoofer: A speaker designed to reproduce very
low bass frequencies, usually those below about 80 Hz.
Suspension: The elements that hold a loudspeaker
driver's moving parts together, allows them to move, and
helps return them to rest. Most commonly, these include the
flexible surround around the outer rim of the driver and the
spider on the underside of the diaphragm. See Spider.
S-VHS: Super VHS. Enhancement to regular VHS that
offers improved luminance resolution. (400 lines or so.)
S-Video: See Y/C.
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T
Tactile Transducer: A device that turns electrical
energy into mechanical energy, usually used to shake the
seating in a theater. Effective in providing visceral impact
without increasing the system's actual SPL level.
THD: Total Harmonic Distortion. A lower value
indicates a more pure, clean sound.
3:2 Pulldown Recognition or 3:2 Inverse Telecine:
Film is usually recorded at 24 frames per second. NTSC video
(North America) is 30 frames (60 fields) per second. In
order to get smooth motion, the film frames are broken into
video fields in a 3-2-3 sequence. 3 fields for the first
film frame, 2 fields for the second film frame, and so on.
If a line doubler doesn't compensate for the extra field
during playback on a progressive-scan display, the image
will have noticeable motion artifacts. A line doubler with
3:2 pulldown recognition or 3:2 inverse telecine can see
this sequence in the signal and correct for it by making
sure the last field in the first frame isn't mixed with the
first field of the second frame.
THX: Certification program for home theater
equipment. Uses some proprietary features, but mostly
assures a base quality level for a given room size. (See THX
Select or Ultra.) Is compatible with any and all soundtrack
formats. Stands for either Tom Holman's eXperiment, after
the engineer who drafted the original standard, or is named
after the company's founder George Lucas' first movie, THX
1138. Nobody agrees on which.
THX Select: Certification program for speakers and
receivers that assures a base level of quality and
performance when played in a room that's between 2,000 and
3,000 cubic feet.
THX Ultra: Certification program for speakers,
receivers, and amplifiers that assures a base level of
quality and performance when played in a room that's greater
than 3,000 cubic feet.
THX Ultra 2: The newest certification from THX,
THX Ultra 2 requires amplification for seven channels,
boundary compensation for subwoofers, and stricter
requirements for amplifiers and speakers than THX Ultra.
Dipole speakers are used for the side surround channels.
Monopole speakers are used for the surround back channel and
are placed next to each other. The Ultra 2 processor
accommodates both 5.1 EX/ES soundtracks, as well as
multichannel audio recordings by directing ambient sounds to
the dipole speakers and discrete effects/sounds to the back
channels.
Transducer: Any device that converts one form of
energy into another form of energy, specifically when one of
the quantities is electrical. Thus, a loudspeaker converts
electrical impulses into sound (mechanical impulses), a
microphone converts sound into electrical impulses, a solar
cell converts light into electricity, etc.
Transmission Line: A (sub)woofer cabinet design
where the driver is mounted at one end of a tube with the
same diameter as the radiating area of the driver and a
length of 1/4 wavelength of the 3dB down frequency. This
"tube" may or may not be round and may be folded to decrease
the size of the cabinet.
Tuner: See Receiver.
Tweeter: A speaker driver designed to reproduce
high frequencies; usually those over approximately 5,000 to
10,000 Hz.
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U
Uniformity: Even distribution across a given space.
In video, uniformity can refer to the distribution of light
(hot spotting) or color.
Unity Gain: Output that equals the input. Unity
gain screen material reflects as much light as the reference
material. Has an even dispersion of light.
Universal Remote: Remote that has the commands of
numerous brands stored into memory and can control several
different devices simultaneously.
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V
VAS: The volume of air that offers the same degree of
restoring force on the loudspeaker driver's cone as that of
the cone's suspension.
VCR: See Video Cassette Recorder.
VCR Plus: VCR feature that, once programmed,
allows the user to input the TV guide code for a given
program into the VCR, which then automatically sets itself
to record that program.
Vented: See Port or Passive Radiator.
VHS: Vertical Helical Scan (or as JCV calls it,
"Video Home System"). Widely used method of recording audio
and video electrical signals onto magnetic tape.
Video Cassette Recorder: Device that records audio
and video electrical signals onto magnetic tape (aka
videotape recorder).
Volt: The unit of electrical potential, or
difference in electrical pressure, expressing the difference
between two electrical charges.
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W
Watt: A unit of power or energy. One horsepower is
equal to 745.7 watts.
Word Length: The sampling rate determines how
often an analog wave is sampled; the word length determines
the resolution of the sample. The larger the word length,
the more accurate the sample as a whole. A 16-bit word
length (CD) allows 65,536 different level or volume steps
that can be chosen for each sample.
WMA: Windows Media Audio. An audio compression
format similar to MP3, but with digital rights management
(copy protection and usage restrictions) built-in by
Microsoft.
Woofer: A speaker driver designed to reproduce low
frequencies.
Wow-and-Flutter: A measurement of speed
instability in analog equipment usually applied to cassette
transports and turntables. Wow is slow-speed variations, and
flutter is fast-speed variations. Lower percentages are
better.
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X
X-over: see crossover.
X-curve: An intentional roll-off in a theatrical
system's playback response above ~2kHz at 3dB per octave. A
modern convention (standardized between 1975 and 1984)
specified in ISO Bulletin 2969, it is measured at the
rerecording position in a dubbing stage or two-thirds of the
way back in a movie theater. Pink noise should measure flat
to 2kHz and then should roll-off above that. Home THX
processors add this roll-off, when engaged, so that a home
video soundtrack will have the same response as it would in
a theatrical setting.
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Y
Y/C: Abbreviation for luminance/ chrominance, aka
S-video signal. Color and detail signals are kept separate,
thus preventing composite video artifacts. Cable uses
four-pin connector. Used with S-VHS VCRs, DVD players, Hi-8,
and DBS receivers.
Y/Pb/Pr: See component video.
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Z
Zone: One or more rooms powered by one or more
amplifiers, which are all fed by one source. A home can be
divided into multiple zones, which can play multiple
sources, even though several rooms (say, the kitchen, dining
room, and living room) all play the same source.
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