- stereophonic signal
- S-сигнал, разностный сигнал (в стереофонии)
English-Russian dictionary of telecommunications and their abbreviations. A.V. Alexandrov.. 2004.
English-Russian dictionary of telecommunications and their abbreviations. A.V. Alexandrov.. 2004.
Stereophonic sound — Stereophonic sound, commonly called stereo, is the reproduction of sound, using two or more independent audio channels, through a symmetrical configuration of loudspeakers, in such a way as to create a pleasant and natural impression of sound… … Wikipedia
stereophonic — F/A/V commonly shortened to stereo , input from all microphones is split into at least two channels before driving the signal through the loudspeakers … Audio and video glossary
Pilot signal — In telecommunications, a pilot is a signal, usually a single frequency, transmitted over a communications system for supervisory, control, equalization, continuity, synchronization, or reference purposes. Frequency spectrum of an FM broadcast… … Wikipedia
Monaural — Label for 1.0 sound, mono. Monaural or monophonic sound reproduction (often shortened to mono) is single channel. Typically there is only one microphone, one loudspeaker, or (in the case of headphones and multiple loudspeakers) channels are fed… … Wikipedia
Microphone — For the indie film, see Microphone (film). Microphones redirects here. For the indie band, see The Microphones. A … Wikipedia
Gramophone record — A 12 inch (30 cm) 33⅓ rpm record (left), a 7 inch 45 rpm record (right), and a CD (above) A gramophone record, commonly known as a phonograph record (in American English), vinyl record (in reference to vinyl, the material most commonly used after … Wikipedia
Disneyland Records — Founded 1956 Founder Walt Disney Status Defunct (Renamed t … Wikipedia
sound recording — Introduction transcription of vibrations in air that are perceptible as sound onto a storage medium, such as a phonograph disc. In sound reproduction the process is reversed so that the variations stored on the medium are converted back… … Universalium
Crosby system — The Crosby system was an FM stereophonic broadcasting standard, developed by Murray G. Crosby, that used an FM subcarrier for higher fidelity. It competed with the Zenith/GE system that used an AM subcarrier. Many audiophiles were disappointed… … Wikipedia
WCRB — Infobox Radio Station name = WCRB area = Boston, Massachusetts city = Lowell, Massachusetts branding = Boston s Classical Station 99.5 WCRB slogan = airdate = 1954 (on FM, operated on AM since 1948) frequency = 99.5 (MHz) HD Radio format =… … Wikipedia
Surround sound — Surround sound, using multichannel audio, encompasses a range of techniques for enriching (expanding and deepening) the sound reproduction quality, of an audio source, with additional audio channels reproduced via additional, discrete speakers.… … Wikipedia