CCTV Glossary

01. AGC 02. ALC 03. Aperture 04. Auto iris(AI)
05. Back-focus 06. BNC 07. Brightness 08. CCD
09. CCIR 10. CCTV 11. C-mount 12. Coaxial cable
13. CS-Mount 14. dB 15. DSP 16. EIA
17. F-number 18. Focal length 19. Gain 20. Gamma
21. Gen-lock 22. Horizontal resolution 23. IR light 24. Iris
25. Lens 26. Line-locked 27. Lux [Ix ] 28. NTSC
29. Output impedance 30. PAL 31. Pan and tilt head (P/T head) 32. Pan unit
33. Peak-to-peak (pp) 34. Pixel 35. Protocol 36. PTZ camera
37. PTZsite driver
(or receiver or decoder)
38. Resolution 39. Remote control 40. RG-58
41. RG-59 42. RS-232 43. RS-485 44. Signal-to-Noise
ratio (S/N)
45. Twisted-pair 46. White balance 47. Y/C 48. Zoom lens
 
01.AGC
Automatic gain control. A section in an electronic circuit that has feedback and regulates a certain voltage level to fall within predetermined margins
 
02.ALC
Automatic light control A part of the electronics of an automatic iris lens that has a function similar to backlight compensation in photography.
 
03.Aperture
The opening of a lens that controls the amount of light reaching the surface of the pickup device. The size of the aperture is controlled by the iris adjustment. By increasing the F- stop number( F / 1.4, F / 1.8, F / 2.8, etc.) less light is permitted to the pickup device.
 
04.Auto iris ( AI )
An automatic method of varying the size of a lens aperture in response to changes in scene illumination.
 
05.Back-focus
A procedure of adjusting the physical position of the CCD - chip / lens to achieve the correct focus for all focal length settings (especially critical with zoom lenses).
 
06.BNC
BNC stands for Bay9onet - Neil - Councilman connector, and it is the most popular connector in CCTV and broadcast TV for transmitting a basic bandwidth video signal over a coaxial cable.
 
07.Brightness
In NTSC and PAL video signals, the brightness information at any particular instant in a picture is conveyed by the corresponding instantaneous DC level of active video. Brightness control is an adjustment of setup ( black level, black reference ).
 
08.CCD
Charge-coupled device. The new age imaging device, replacing the old tubes. When first invented in the 1970s, it was initially intended to be used as a memory device. Most often used in cameras, but also in telexing, fax machines, scanners, etc.
 
09.CCIR
Committee Consultative International des Radio communique or, in English, Consultative Committee for International Radio, which is the European standardization body that has set the standards for television in Europe. It was initially monochrome; therefore, today the term CCIR is usually used to refer to monochrome cameras that are used in PAL countries.
 
10.CCTV
Closed circuit television A television system intended for only a limited number of viewers, as opposed to broadcast TV.
 
11.C-mount
The first standard for CCTV lens screw mounting. It is defined with the thread of 1" ( 2.54mm ) in diameter and 32 threads/inch, and the back flange-to-CCD distance of 17.526mm ( 0.69" ). The C-mount description applies to both lenses and cameras. C-mount lenses can be put on both C-mount and CS-mount cameras, only in the latter case an adaptor is required.
 
12.Coaxial cable
The most common type of cable used for copper transmission of video signals. It has a coaxial cross-section, where the center core is the signal conductor, while the outer shield protects it from external electromagnetic interference.
 
13.CS-Mount
A newer standard for lens mounting. It uses the same physical thread as the lenses made smaller, more compact and less expensive.CS-mount lenses can only be used on CS-mount cameras.
 
14.dB
Decibel A logarithmic ratio of two signals or values, usually refers to power, but also voltage and current. When power is calculated the logarithm is multiplied by 10, while for current and voltage by 20.
 
15.DSP
Digital signal processing. It usually refers to the electronic circuit section of a device capable of processing digital signals.
 
16.EIA
Electronics Industry Association, which has recommended the television standard used in the U. S¡FCanada and Japan, based on 525 lines interlaced scanning. Formerly known as RMA or RETMA.
 
17.F-number
In lenses with adjustable irises, the maximum iris opening is expressed as a ratio ( focal length of the lens )/( maximum diameter of aperture ). This maximum iris will be engraved on the front ring of the lens.
 
18.Focal length
The distance between the optical center of a lens and the principal convergent focus point.
 
19.Gain
Any increase or decrease in strength of an electrical signal. Gain is measured in terms of decibels or number of tines of magnification.
 
20.Gamma
A correction of the linear response of a camera in order to compensate for the monitor phosphor screen nonlinear response. It is measured with the exponential value of the curve describing the non-linearity. A typical monochrome monitor's gamma is 2.2, and a camera needs to be set to the inverse value of 2.2( which is 0.45 )for the overall system to respond linearly ( I. e; unity ).
 
21.Gen-lock
way of locking the video signal of a camera to an external generator of synchronization pulses.
 
22.Horizontal resolution
Chrominance and luminance resolution (detail) expressed horizontally across a picture tube. This is usually expressed as a number of black to white transitions or lines that can be differentiated. Limited by the bandwidth of the video signal or equipment.
 
23.IR light
Infrared light, invisible to the human eye. It usually refers to wavelengths longer than 700 nm. Monochrome (B / W) cameras have extremely high sensitivity in the infrared region of the light spectrum.
 
24.Iris
A means of controlling the size of a lens aperture and therefore the amount of light passing through the lens.
 
25.Lens
An optical device for focusing a desired scene onto the imaging device in a CCTV camera.
 
26.Line-locked
In CCTV, this usually refers to multiple cameras being powered by a common alternative current (AC) source (either 24V AC, 110V AC or 240V AC) and consequently have field frequencies locked to the same AC source frequency (50 Hz in CCIR systems and 60Hz in EIA systems).
 
27.Lux [Ix ]
Light unit for measuring illumination. It is defined as the illumination of a surface when luminous flux of 1 lumen falls on an area of 1 m. It is also known as lumen per square meter or meter-candelas.
 
28.NTSC
National Television System Committee. American committee that set the standards for color television as used today in the U.S., Canada, Japan and parts of South America. NTSC television uses a 3.57945 MHz sub-carrier whose phase varies with the instantaneous hue of the televised color and whose amplitude varies with the instantaneous saturation of the color. NTSC employs 525 lines per frame and 59.94 fields per second.
 
29.Output impedance
The impedance a device presents to its load. The impedance measured at the output terminals of a transducer with the load disconnected and all impressed driving forces taken as zero.
 
30.PAL
Phase alternating line. Describes the color phase change in a PAL color signal. PAL is a European color TV system featuring 625 lines per frame, 50 fields per second and a 4.43361875-MHz sub-carrier. Used mainly in Europe, China, Malaysia, Australia, New Zealand, the Middle East and parts of Africa. PAL-M is a Brazilian color TV system with phase alternation by line, but using 525 lines per frame, 60 fields per second and a 3.57561149-MHz sub-carrier.
 
31.Pan and tilt head (P/T head)
A motorized unit permitting vertical and horizontal positioning of a camera and lens combination. Usually 24V AC motors are used in such P/T heads, but also 110V AC, i.e., 240V AC units can be ordered.
 
32.Pan unit
A motorized unit permitting horizontal positioning of a camera.
 
33.Peak-to-peak (pp)
The amplitude (voltage) difference between the most positive and the most negative excursions (peaks) of an electrical signal.
34.Pixel
Derived from picture element. Usually refers to the CCD chip unit picture cell. It consists of a photo sensor plus its associated control gates.
 
35.Protocol
A specific set of rules, procedures or conventions relating to format and timing of data transmission between two devices. A standard procedure that two data devices must accept and use to be able to understand each other. The protocols for data communications cover such things as framing, error handing, and transparency and line control.
 
36.PTZ camera
Pan, tilt and zoom camera.
 
37.PTZ site driver (or receiver or decoder)
An electronic device, usually a part of a video matrix switcher, which receives digital, encoded control signals in order to operate pan, tilt, zoom and focus functions.
 
38.Resolution
A measure of the ability of a camera or television system to reproduce detail. The number of picture elements that can be reproduced with good definition.
 
39.Remote control
A transmitting and receiving of signals for controlling remote devices such as pan and tilt units, lens functions, wash and wipe control and similar.
 
40.RG-58
A coaxial cable designed with 50-ø[ impedance; therefore, not suitable for CCTV. Very similar to RG-59, only slightly thinner.
 
41.RG-59
A type of coaxial cable that is most common in use in small to medium-size CCTV systems. It is designed with an impedance of 75-ø[. It has an outer diameter of around 6 mm and it is a good compromise between maximum distances achievable (up to 300 m for monochrome signal and 250 m for color) and good transmission.
 
42.RS-232
A format of digital communication where only two wires are requited. It is also known as a serial data communication. The RS-232 standard defines a scheme for asynchronous communications, but it does not define how the data should be represented by the bits, i.e., it does not define the overall message format and protocol. It is very often used in CCTV communications between keyboards and matrix switchers or between matrix switchers and PTZ site drivers. The advantage of RS-232 over others is its simplicity and use of only two wires.
 
43.RS-485
This is an advanced format of digital communications compared to RS-422. The major improvement is in the number of receivers that can be driven with this format, and this is up to 32.
 
44.Signal-to-Noise ratio (S/N)
An S/N ratio can be given for the luminance signal, chrominance signal and audio signal. The S/N ratio is the ratio of noise to actual total signal, and it shows how much higher the signal level is than the level of noise. It is expressed in decibels (dB), and the bigger the value is, the crisper and clearer the picture and sound will be during playback. An S/N ratio is calculated with the logarithm of the normal signal and the noise RMS value.
 
45.Twisted-pair
A cable composed of two small-insulated conductors twisted together. Since both wires have nearly equal exposure to any interference, the differential noise is slight.
 
46.White balance
An electronic process used in video cameras to retain true colors. It is performed electronically on the basis of a white object in the picture.
 
47.Y/C
A video format found in Super-VHS video recorders. Luminance is marked with Y and is produced separate to the C, which stands for chrominance. Thus, an S-VHS output Y/C requires two coaxial cables for a perfect output.
 
48.Zoom lens

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A camera lens that can vary the focal length while keeping the object in focus, giving an impression of coming closer to or going away from an object. It is usually controlled by a keyboard with buttons that are marked zoom-in and zoom-out. 



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