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Definition von cross-talk im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch
A signal leak from one channel to another - often the cause of noise and distortion
A type of interference caused by signals from one circuit being coupled into adjacent circuits
Interference or noise in a sensor or channel, coming from another sensor or channel
Unwanted breakthrough of one channel into another Also refers to the distortion that occurs when some signal from a music source that you are not listening to leaks into the circuit of the source that you are listening to
A condition of wireless communication that occurs when one data transmission is corrupted by another transmission, commonly resulting from an inaccurately aimed or accidentally bounced signal transmission
When electrical noise on the cable originates from signals on other wires in the cable, this is known as crosstalk Interfering energy transferred from one circuit to another (see Testing The Network)
Another term for cross axis or transverse sensitivity; used on Kistler multi-component force transducers to describe the output on one axis caused by inputs on the others
noise from one telephone line that is audible on another line Caused when lines are too close, touching, not twisted, or by bad punch-downs or other wiring problems Can allow noise bleed-through from the DSL line to other voice lines in the same location
A phenomena where the audio from one channel bleeds into another causing an undesirable effect This is present in all electronics to some extent or another and will be rated in dB when there is a rating on the equipment It also is the unwanted signal that gets passed between audio lines that are too close together
For an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) with more than one input, crosstalk is the amount of signal from one analog input that appears on the measured analog input This value is typically specified in decibels For a digital-to-analog converter (DAC), crosstalk is the amount of noise that appears on the DAC output(s) when another DAC is being updated
The phenomenon in which a signal transmitted on one circuit or channel of a transmission system creates an undesired effect in another circuit or channel, generally related to wire placement, shielding, and transmission techniques
Unwanted interference from another adjacent communications channel The signal from the adjacent channel is inserted into the original communications channel
the phenomenon whereby telecommunications signals on one circuit can leak across to another, potentially degrading the performance on the affected circuit
The unwanted transfer of energy (signal) from one circuit to another circuit Crosstalk interferes with the desired data signal Handheld cable testers can be used to determine the level of unwanted crosstalk in network cabling
{i} informal conversation, chat; fast and witty conversation; (Telecommunications) interference caused by the mixing of two frequencies that are traveling on different channels (as on a telephone or radio)
The presence of an unwanted signal "leaking" into another Listening to binaural (dummy head) signals over stereo loudspeakers is unsatisfactory because of the unwanted leakage of sound from the right loudspeaker to the left ear, and the unwanted sound from the left loudspeaker to the right ear These unwanted components are called crosstalk
The coupling of unwanted signals from one pair within a cable to another pair Crosstalk can be measured at the same (near) end or far end with respect to the signal source
The wires in a cable are located in very close proximity to each other This results in a signal in one wire inducing smaller signals in the adjacent wires Crosstalk can be a problem for SCSI transmissions at higher speeds or over long distances A good cable quality and the proper layout of the wires inside the cable can minimize the effects of crosstalk
A type of interference caused by audio frequencies from one pair being coupled into adjacent pairs The term is also used to describe coupling at higher frequencies
Transmission noise caused by energy "leaking" from one channel to another on the same facility [In analog voice communications, crosstalk makes conversation on one circuit accidentally audible on another ]
Parasitic coupling between signal channels At audio frequencies, crosstalk normally results from ground loops introduced by the use of one ground return for more than one high-current signal path In one example of crosstalk avoidance, separate ground return lines for the two speakers of a stereo system avoid such cross coupling