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WaveA wave is a disturbance that propagates. Apart from electromagnetic radiation, which can travel through vacuum, waves have a medium through which they travel and can transfer energy from one place to another without any of the particles of the medium being displaced permanently. Instead, any particular point oscillates around a fixed position.
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Waves can be described using a number of standard variables including: frequency, wavelength, amplitude and period. The amplitude of a wave is the measure of the magnitude of the maximum disturbance in the medium during one wave cycle, and is measured in units depending on the type of wave. For examples, waves on a string have an amplitude expressed as a distance (meters), sound waves as pressure (pascals) and electromagnetic waves as the amplitude of the electric field (volts/meter). The amplitude may be constant (in which case the wave is a c.w. or continuous wave) or may vary with time and/or position. The form of the variation of amplitude is called the envelope of the wave.
The period (T) is the time for one complete cycle for an oscillation of a wave. The frequency (F) is how many periods per unit time (for example one second) and is measured in hertz. These are related by:
When waves are expressed mathematically, the angular frequency (ω, radians/second) is often used; it is related to the frequency f by:
<math>y=A(z,t) \cos (\omega t - kz + \phi)</math>,
where A(z,t) is the amplitude envelope of the wave, k is the wave number and φ is the phase. The velocity v of this wave is given by:
<math>v=\frac{\omega}{k}= \lambda f</math>,
where λ is the wavelength of the wave.
In the most general sense, not all waves are sinusoidal. One example of a non-sinusoidal wave is a pulse that travels down a rope resting on the ground. In the most general case, any function of x, y, z, and t that is a non-trivial solution to the wave equation is a wave. The wave equation is a differential equation which describes a harmonic wave passing through a certain medium. The equation has different forms depending on how the wave is transmitted, and on what medium.
The Schrödinger equation describes the wave-like behaviour of particles in quantum mechanics. Solutions of this equation are wave functions which can be used to describe the probability density of a particle.
scale and color.html">color scanning, whose advantages and disadvantages need to be
can represent a complex trade-off between the time it takes to capture
printing and equipment availability. All these factors must be taken
cost-effective manner of printed facsimiles that consisted largely of
compressed efficiently and in a lossless manner (i.e., no data is lost in
bit-representation is maintained) using Group 4 CCITT (i.e., the French
Telephone) compression.html">compression.html">compression. CXP was getting compression ratios of about
less economical and can represent a lossy compression (i.e., not
is subtly changed. While binary.html">binary files produce a high-quality printed
gray.html">gray.html">gray and/or color hold great promise as well, and 2) that gray scale can
associated with binary and gray scale also depends on the equipment used.
printer.
Among CXP's findings concerning the production of microfilm from digital.html">digital
were used to produce sample film using an electron beam recorder. The
and while CXP felt that the text and image pages represented in the Reed
readings for the 600 dpi were not as high as standard microfilming.
not totally transferable to a digital environment. Moreover, they are
this case will prove to be a long, uphill struggle, CXP plans to continue
advantages of creating film: it can serve as a primary backup and as a
or production master and service copies could be paper, film, optical
scanning workstation represented a third goal of CXP; to date, 1,000
hard-copy replacements for the originals and additional prints on
offers an affordable means for reformatting brittle material.
.
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