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A/DAnalog-to-Digital Converter. This device is what all digital imaging systems use to get real-world pictures from a TV camera, for example into a computer.
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A/DAnalog to digital signal conversion
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A/DAnalog-to-Digital converter; an electronic circuit or device that converts an analog input signal into a digital signal.
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A/DAnalog-to-Digital. See Analog-to-Digital conversion. Also written as AD, A-D, or A-to-D.
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A/DAnalog / Digital
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A/DAeroDrome
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A/DAcronym for Analog-to-Digital converter which converts an analog signal to a digital signal. A/D converters may be referred to as 8-bit, 10-bit, 12-bit converters. This just means the analog representation when converted into digital will have a tonal range from 0-255 for 8-bit, 0-1023 for 10-bit and 0-4095 for 12-bit converters.
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A/DAbbreviation of Analog-to-Digital Conversion, the conversion of a quantity that has continuous changes (like electrical signals) into numbers that approximate those changes (i.e., computer data).
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A/D(a/d) aerodrome.
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A/Danalogue-to-digital.
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A/DAnalog-to-Digital conversion. The conversion of an analog voltage into one of many digital steps that corresponds to the voltage. The digital value represents the voltage at the time it was sampled. The number of bits determines the number of steps within the full analog range and how fine the resolution is.
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A/DAnalog/Digital. These letters are often used together when analog to digital conversion takes place.
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A/DAn abbreviation of Analog to Digital Conversion (the conversion of a quantity that has continuous changes into numbers that approximate those changes), or Analog to Digital Converter.
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