Encyclopedia

sampling rate

Also found in: Dictionary, Medical, Financial, Acronyms, Wikipedia.

sampling rate

[′sam·pliŋ ‚rāt]
(engineering)
The rate at which measurements of physical quantities are made; for example, if it is desired to calculate the velocity of a missile and its position is measured each millisecond, then the sampling rate is 1000 measurements per second.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

high-resolution sampling rates

Following is a list of common digital sample sizes and sampling rates for high-quality audio. See high-resolution audio, DSD and high-resolution audio sources.

Sample                         Stereo  Size     Sampling Rate       Transfer (Bits)  Samples Per Second      Rate

   16     44,056 (44.1 kHz)**  1409 kbps

   16     48,000 (48 kHz)      1536 kbps

   24     88,200 (88.2 kHz)    4234 kbps

   24     96,000 (96 kHz)      4608 kbps

   24    176,400 (176.4 kHz)   8467 kbps

   24    192,000 (192 kHz)     9216 kbps

   24    384,000 (384 kHz)    18432 kbps


   Compressed MP3 files (for comparison)

           Common MP3 file:    128 kbps

           High-res MP3 file:  320 kbps


   ** Standard music CD (see  CD-DA)

sampling

(1) In statistics, the analysis of a group by determining the characteristics of a significant percentage of its members chosen at random.

(2) Converting analog signals into digital form. Audio and other analog signals are continuous waveforms that are analyzed at various points in time and converted into digital samples. The accuracy with which the digital samples reflect their analog origins is based on "sampling rate" and "sample size." See A/D converter.

Sampling Rate - When to Measure
The sampling rate is the number of times per second that the waveform is measured, which typically ranges from 8 to 192 thousand times per second (8 kHz to 192 kHz). The greater the rate, the higher the frequency that can be captured. For a comparison of high-quality samples, see high-resolution sampling rates.

The sampling rate must be at least twice that of the analog frequency being captured. For example, the sampling rate used to create the digital data on a CD is 44.1 kHz, slightly more than double the 20kHz frequency an average person can hear. The sampling rate for digitizing voice for a toll-quality conversation is typically 8,000 times per second (8 kHz), twice the 4 kHz required for the full spectrum of the human voice. See analog and Nyquist theorem.

Sample Size - The Measurement
Also called "resolution" and "precision," the sample size is the measurement of each sample point on a numeric scale. Known as "quantizing," the sample point is turned into the closest whole number. The more granular the scale (the more increments), the more accurate the digital sample represents the original analog signal. See oversampling, quantization and PCM.


Sampling Sound
The faster the sampling rate and the larger the sample size, the more accurately sound can be digitized. An 8-bit sample breaks the sound wave into 255 increments compared with 65,535 for a 16-bit sample.







Sampling Dialog
This recording dialog from an earlier Sound Blaster sound card shows typical sampling options for digitizing sound into Windows WAV files.







DSD - A High-Res Sampling Technique
Direct Stream Digital (DSD) is a dramatic departure from PCM. Instead of turning samples into a number with a range of values, DSD samples are only 1-bit long (0 or 1), depending on whether the wave is moving up or down from the previous sample point (see DSD).
Copyright © 1981-2025 by The Computer Language Company Inc. All Rights reserved. THIS DEFINITION IS FOR PERSONAL USE ONLY. All other reproduction is strictly prohibited without permission from the publisher.
Mentioned in
References in periodicals archive
The Data Translation Model DT9816-S provides six independent channels with a 750-kS/s maximum sampling rate on each.
Few other PC-based LAs offer such a high timing-mode sampling rate. Scott Savage, product manager, high-speed digital I/O at National Instruments (NI), said, "One of the limiting factors restricting PC-based LA development compared to that of larger stand-alone instruments is the clock rate of digital pin electronics.
Each of the four manufacturer's MSOs combines changes in sampling rate, acquisition memory length, and horizontal magnification to arrive at a composite maximum time-base rate as high as 200 ps/div.
So what is a sufficient sampling rate? Similar to bandwidth, there is no exact answer but rather a rule of thumb.
Figure 5(a) is the coded aperture with 0/1 randomly distributed, and the sampling rate is 0.4.
The 12-bit SAR ADC IP features excellent dynamic performance - 70dB SNDR under 2MSPS sampling rate and 3.3V, and 69dB SNDR under 1.5MSPS sampling rate and 1.8V.
In this paper, we propose to set the sampling rate of each block based on texture details.
Therefore, the sampling rate is reduced significantly compared with Nyquist rate.
With a real-time sampling rate of up to 5GSa/s, the PicoScope 6000 Series oscilloscopes can display single-shot pulses with 200ps time resolution.
To digitize such UWB radar signal, a very high sampling rate is required according to Shannon-Nyquist sampling theorem [1], namely, the received signals must be sampled at twice their baseband bandwidth.
During the interim, a worm may locate another vulnerable target and propagate, whereas a higher sampling rate may detect and prevent the spread.
Copyright © 2003-2025 Farlex, Inc Disclaimer
All content on this website, including dictionary, thesaurus, literature, geography, and other reference data is for informational purposes only. This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional.