Spectrum: Difference between revisions
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imported>John R. Brews (add link) |
imported>Meg Taylor No edit summary |
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{{ | {{rpl|Electromagnetic spectrum}} | ||
{{ | {{rpl|Spectrum (linear operator)}} | ||
{{ | {{rpl|Political spectrum}} | ||
{{ | {{rpl|Vibrational spectrum}} | ||
{{ | {{rpl|Action spectrum}} | ||
{{ | {{rpl|Spectrum bias}} | ||
{{ | {{rpl|Spread spectrum}} |
Latest revision as of 01:39, 25 September 2013
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same or a similar title.
- Electromagnetic spectrum: The range of electromagnetic waves covering all frequencies and wavelengths. [e]
- Spectrum (linear operator): A set of values {λ} characteristic of an operator O mapping a Banach space into itself such that O xλ = λ xλ for some nonzero vectors xλ. [e]
- Political spectrum: A common way of referring to political positions by pointing out where they stand between two extremes on a one-dimensional line from left-to-right. [e]
- Vibrational spectrum: The set of frequencies exhibited by regular, periodic motions of the parts of a mechanical system relative to one another that persist once excited without requiring an external driving agency. [e]
- Action spectrum: Scientific terminology for the correlation between specific wavelengths of the light spectrum and corresponding physiological activity. [e]
- Spectrum bias: Differences between the type of patients in the clinically relevant population and the study population, which leads to an overestimation of the sensitivity and specificity of a test. [e]
- Spread spectrum: A communications technique in which the information to be transmitted travels redundantly over multiple channels (e.g., frequencies, time slots), the number and identity of which may change. It provides greater immunity to noise and electronic attack, makes it harder to intercept, and can increase capacity of a shared medium. [e]