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  1. Dictionary
    fre·quen·cy
    /ˈfrēkwənsē/

    noun

    • 1. the rate at which something occurs or is repeated over a particular period of time or in a given sample: "an increase in the frequency of accidents due to increased overtime"
    • 2. the rate at which a vibration occurs that constitutes a wave, either in a material (as in sound waves), or in an electromagnetic field (as in radio waves and light), usually measured per second: "different thicknesses of glass will absorb different frequencies of sound"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Frequency of a signal means the number of occurrences of a repeating event per unit of time. So if the unit of time is seconds then frequency is measured with Herz: 1Hz = 1/s. So a signal with 100Hz, has a pattern that repeats 100 times per second. The most basic signal (from the point of view of signal processing) is a sinus signal. y(t) = sin ...

  3. Instead of reducing the image frequency by blurring, aliasing can also be mitigating by increasing the sampling frequency, i.e. having more megapixels (without increasing sensor size or lens sharpness). Digital medium format cameras have lots of megapixels but still suffer from aliasing due to sharper lenses.

  4. The central line corresponds to the average values along the y direction for the various sampling frequencies along the x direction. It is roughly constant: this means that the average value of the image along the short side, independently of the frequency of sampling along the long side, is the same.

  5. Nyquist frequency - The highest frequency continuous signal that can be represented by a discreet signal (for a given sampling frequency). These two terms are two sides of the same coin. The first gives you a bound on sampling rate as a function of max frequency. The second gives you the max possible frequency as a function of sampling rate.

  6. Sep 28, 2016 · The golden hour is the period of time (roughly an hour) immediately either side of sunrise/sunset. At this time the sun is very low in the sk

  7. Feb 6, 2011 · The diffraction cutoff frequency is generally the point where resolution reaches the wavelength of the frequencies of light itself. For visible light, λ between 380–750nm, or 0.38–0.75 microns. Until the cutoff frequency has been met for a given aperture, more resolution can be achieved. Visual Examples

  8. You can use frequency modulation for printing color images as well. Dithering has a specific technical definition used more in digital images instead of the printing world. According to Wikipedia -- "Dithering is a technique used in computer graphics to create the illusion of color depth in images with a limited color palette (color quantization).

  9. The relative mix of blue and yellow and the exact emitted frequency ranges are varies to produc elight ranging from "warm white" (around 2500 - 3500 Kelvin effective colour temperature) up through daylight like whites in the 4000K - 7000k range and then to distnctly blue whites up to about 10,000 K equivalent.

  10. Softness - in its most basic sense, is a lack of (or less) edge definition (edge contrast) and/or fine detail, when compared with a "sharp" image. It is not possible for a single coloured image (eg an image containing only a red fill) , or an image with very little detail, such as a gentle fade, to be classed as either soft or sharp, as there is no defined contract area or fine detail to base ...

  11. Jun 10, 2014 · sensitivities are frequency dependent, incoming light is not pure spectrally, sensors do not have a mathematical model (there are non-linearities, etc.) and let's not even go into the definition of "lumen", which involves frequency dependent intensity response of the human eye...

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