释义 |
Definition of bandpass in English: bandpassadjectiveˈban(d)pɑːsˈbandpas (of a filter) transmitting only a set range of frequencies. 带通(滤波器) a 1–40 Hz bandpass filter 一台1-40赫兹的带通滤波器。 Example sentencesExamples - The multiplex type filter contains at least two disparate bandpass filters for separate reception or transmission frequency bands.
- The bandpass filter minimizes any effect from the change in ambient lighting conditions that could degrade sensor operation.
- The excitation source, a xenon arc lamp, provides a white light beam that is sent through a bandpass filter and reflected into a microscope objective through a dichroic filter.
- You can also change volume and reverb levels on each track, adjust resonance and center frequency of a simple bandpass filter, and change pitch and tempo globally.
- After propagating through the bandpass filter, the light is linearly polarized and reflected toward the target by a beamsplitter.
nounˈban(d)pɑːsˈbandpas The range of frequencies which are transmitted through a bandpass filter. (通过带通滤波器的)波段 Example sentencesExamples - Excitation and collection bandpasses were 4 nm in all cases.
- Tuning is the process of successfully shifting bottlenecks to places that have a wide enough bandpass to handle your data throughput needs.
- The excitation wavelength was 309 nm and the emission was monitored at 371 nm with a slit setting of 0.59 mm corresponding to a 2.5-nm spectral bandpass.
- This retains features within the bandpass of the microscope while suppressing noise components with higher spatial frequencies.
- Excitation and emission slits with a nominal bandpass of 5 nm were used.
- All signals were amplified with a gain of 20,000 and a bandpass of 0.1-100 Hz (- 12 dB / octave; 3 dB attenuation), digitized at a rate of 250 Hz, and stored on disk for off-line averaging.
- For a spectrometer, the bandpass specifies how much spectral bandwidth is being seen for a given wavelength position.
- Probe pulses at center wavelengths across the visible spectrum were obtained by placing interference filters with a 10 nm bandpass in the probe beam before the sample.
- Plotting the changes as the tone frequency is varied across the bandpass of the circuit produces a curve.
- Samples were excited at 270 nm (16-nm bandpasses for excitation and emission).
- One of these sensors is a UV sensor array, consisting of six photodiodes selectively monitoring different bandpasses between 200 and 400 nm.
- One-half of the mirror is optimized for each bandpass.
- Pyrene-labeled lipids were excited at 344 nm, and monomer and excimer emission intensities were detected at 398 and 480 nm, respectively, with bandpasses of 4.0 nm.
- Steady-state fluorescence spectra were obtained on a Spex Fluoromax with a 4 nm bandpass and corrected for lamp spectral intensity and detector response.
- The EEG was amplified by Grass Model 7p511 amplifiers with bandpasses of 0.1-100 Hz.
- Steady-state fluorescence was measured with a SPEX spectrofluorometer with excitation and emission slits providing a bandpass of 7.2 and 3.6 nm, respectively.
Definition of bandpass in US English: bandpassadjectiveˈbandpas (of a filter) transmitting only a set range of frequencies. 带通(滤波器) a 1–40 Hz bandpass filter 一台1-40赫兹的带通滤波器。 Example sentencesExamples - The excitation source, a xenon arc lamp, provides a white light beam that is sent through a bandpass filter and reflected into a microscope objective through a dichroic filter.
- The bandpass filter minimizes any effect from the change in ambient lighting conditions that could degrade sensor operation.
- After propagating through the bandpass filter, the light is linearly polarized and reflected toward the target by a beamsplitter.
- You can also change volume and reverb levels on each track, adjust resonance and center frequency of a simple bandpass filter, and change pitch and tempo globally.
- The multiplex type filter contains at least two disparate bandpass filters for separate reception or transmission frequency bands.
nounˈbandpas The range of frequencies transmitted through a bandpass. (通过带通滤波器的)波段 Example sentencesExamples - Steady-state fluorescence spectra were obtained on a Spex Fluoromax with a 4 nm bandpass and corrected for lamp spectral intensity and detector response.
- Excitation and collection bandpasses were 4 nm in all cases.
- This retains features within the bandpass of the microscope while suppressing noise components with higher spatial frequencies.
- Pyrene-labeled lipids were excited at 344 nm, and monomer and excimer emission intensities were detected at 398 and 480 nm, respectively, with bandpasses of 4.0 nm.
- The EEG was amplified by Grass Model 7p511 amplifiers with bandpasses of 0.1-100 Hz.
- Samples were excited at 270 nm (16-nm bandpasses for excitation and emission).
- Plotting the changes as the tone frequency is varied across the bandpass of the circuit produces a curve.
- Excitation and emission slits with a nominal bandpass of 5 nm were used.
- For a spectrometer, the bandpass specifies how much spectral bandwidth is being seen for a given wavelength position.
- Tuning is the process of successfully shifting bottlenecks to places that have a wide enough bandpass to handle your data throughput needs.
- Steady-state fluorescence was measured with a SPEX spectrofluorometer with excitation and emission slits providing a bandpass of 7.2 and 3.6 nm, respectively.
- One of these sensors is a UV sensor array, consisting of six photodiodes selectively monitoring different bandpasses between 200 and 400 nm.
- All signals were amplified with a gain of 20,000 and a bandpass of 0.1-100 Hz (- 12 dB / octave; 3 dB attenuation), digitized at a rate of 250 Hz, and stored on disk for off-line averaging.
- One-half of the mirror is optimized for each bandpass.
- The excitation wavelength was 309 nm and the emission was monitored at 371 nm with a slit setting of 0.59 mm corresponding to a 2.5-nm spectral bandpass.
- Probe pulses at center wavelengths across the visible spectrum were obtained by placing interference filters with a 10 nm bandpass in the probe beam before the sample.
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