In telecommunication, a disturbance voltage is an unwanted voltage induced in a system by natural or man-made sources. In telecommunications systems, the disturbance voltage creates currents that limit or interfere with the interchange of information. An example of a disturbance voltage is a voltage that produces (a) false signals in a telephone, (b) noise in a radio receiver, or (c) distortion in a received signal.
| Attributes | Values |
|---|---|
| rdfs:label |
|
| rdfs:comment |
|
| sameAs | |
| dcterms:subject | |
| abstract |
|