glossary:glossary_b
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glossary:glossary_b [2019/09/05 23:02] – [Bell signals] Add more info and fix link tgerbic | glossary:glossary_b [2019/10/20 12:35] – [Back EMF] tom_shenton | ||
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- | Back EMF generally refers to the voltage that will appear across an inductor if the current is stopped suddenly | + | Back EMF generally refers |
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===== Baud ===== | ===== Baud ===== | ||
- | Baud in communications refers to changes per second. In the very early days of MODEMs, for example, each bit sent equaled a single change, so baud equaled bits per second (BPS). The terms were initially interchangable. As newer modulation methods (the way the signal is sent or encoded) came along a baud represented more than one bit per second. For example a single baud may have represented two, three or four bits for each change. From that point forward, baud and BPS were no longer the same, though many people still use the terms interchangably. For the sake of clarity, use BPS to represent the number of bits sent per second. | + | Baud in communications refers to changes per second. In the very early days of MODEMs, for example, each bit sent equaled a single change, so baud equaled bits per second (BPS). The terms were initially interchangable. As newer modulation methods (the way the signal is sent or encoded) came along a baud represented more than one bit per second. For example a single baud may have represented two, three or four bits for each change. From that point forward, baud and BPS were no longer the same, though many people still use the terms interchangably. For the sake of clarity, use BPS to represent the number of bits sent per second.\\ |
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===== BC3 ===== | ===== BC3 ===== | ||
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Though there are some universal bell signals, different railroads at different times have had their own signaling schemes. | Though there are some universal bell signals, different railroads at different times have had their own signaling schemes. | ||
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- | [[https:// | + | [[https:// |
===== BGA ===== | ===== BGA ===== |
glossary/glossary_b.txt · Last modified: 2022/10/10 21:55 by Bob Vetterlein