|
AC
Power |
Alternating
Current Power. In the United States, the
standard AC Power is single-phase 117VAC/60Hz
and is provided from power outlets in the house.
24V AC power can be produced from an AC Adapter.
|
|
Alarm
Sensor |
Like Video
Motion Detector, detects changes of motion to
produce an alarm. |
|
Angle of
View |
The scene angle
that a video camera lens can show on the
monitor, like Diagonal Angle, Horizontal Angle
and Vertical Angle, usually described in
degree. |
|
Anti-aliasing |
A procedure
employed to eliminate or reduce (by smoothing
and filtering) the aliasing effects.
|
Aperture |
The light
gathering area of a lens, controlled by the
iris. |
Auto-Focus Lens |
Automatically
adjusts the lens focus from surrounding scene
and keeps a moving object in focus.
|
Automatic
Gain Control
(AGC) |
This is a
feature of many CCTV cameras that helps keep the
strength of the output signal constant, even
when the light level changes. In other words, it
boosts the signal strength at low light levels,
and caps it at higher
levels. |
Auto Iris
(AI) |
Cameras with an
Auto Iris feature, have the ability to
compensate for large variations in light levels.
Particularly useful for cameras that need to
compensate for changes from bright sunlight to
dark shadows. The auto iris circuitry is
normally linked to a motorised iris drive that
physically opens and shuts the iris on the lens.
Closing a physical iris is a much better way to
protect a camera from being damaged by bright
sunlight then simply using electronics to reduce
the signal strength. |
Automatic
White Balance
(AWB) |
This is a
feature of some cameras that automatically
adjusts the color settings to maintain the
quality of the white areas of the
image. |
Back
Focus |
This is the
alignment of the rear of the lens to the imaging
device. |
Back
Light Compensation
(BLC) |
This is a
feature of cameras that automatically adjusts
the image to compensate for bright sunlight or
bright lights, to give more detail on the darker
areas of the image. For example to focus on the
detail of a face of a person that has the
sunlight shining from
behind. |
Balun |
Balun stands for
Balanced - Unbalanced. It is a device used to
interface between balanced lines and unbalanced
lines. For example, twisted pair to
co-axial. |
BNC
Connector |
BNC is a bayonet
style connector for coaxial cable that is most
commonly used for CCTV
installations. |
Brightness Control |
The manual bias
control on a cathode ray tube or other display
device that controls the average brightness and
the contrast of a picture. |
Camera
Format |
Video camera's
CCD chips format; 2/3", 1/3", 1/4", etc.
|
Camera
Sensor |
Video image
sensor. CCD or C-MOS chip. |
CCD |
Charge Coupled
Device. One of the two main types of image
sensing device used in cameras. It operates by
converting light energy into electrical
charge. |
CCIR |
International
Radio Consultative Committee; has made the
technical recommendation for the European 625
line standard for video signals.
|
CCTV |
Closed Circuit
Television. It does not broadcast TV signals but
transmits them over a closed circuit through
electrically conducting cable or wireless
transmitter and receiver. |
CCTV
Camera |
A unit
containing an imaging device that produces a
video signal in the baseband form, usually with
synchronization pulses and color information
(composite video). |
Chip |
An integrated
circuit in which all the components (resistors
capacitors and semiconductors) are
micro-fabricated on a tiny piece of silicon or
specialist material (silicon on sapphire. Often
used to refer to the detector in a CCD camera.
|
C Mount
Lens & CS Mount
Lens |
CCTV lenses are
available in two different lens mounts.
"C-mount" lenses have a flange back distance of
17.5mm vs. 12.5mm for "CS-mount" lenses. Many of
today's cameras can accept either type of lens,
but it is important to make sure that camera and
lens. |
Coaxial
Cable |
This refers to
cable that has a central conductor, surrounded
by a shield sharing the same axis. The shield
can be made from a variety of materials
including, braided copper, or lapped
foil. There are various standards for
specific types of co-axial cable. The cable used
for normal CCTV installations is called
RG59. |
Composite
Video |
A combined
signal in a television transmission. Standard
format such as NTSC, PAL or SECAM. The picture
signal, blanking signal, and vertical/horizontal
synchronizing signals are all combined.
|
Compression |
Digital video
pictures can be compressed with a number of
techniques. These include, JPEG, M-JPEG, MPEG
and Wavelet. |
CRT |
Cathode Ray
Tube. The vacuum tube part of a monitor or
television. |
Date/Time
Generator |
Installed
between a CCTV camera and a monitor, it
generates the information of Date, Time and
camera ID. |
DC Power
|
Direct Current
Power; can be derived from an AC adapter or from
a battery. Among DC voltages of 6, 9, 12, 24,
28, 12VDC is most common in the CCTV
industry. |
Decibel
(dB) |
The power or
voltage ratio of two signals.
|
Digital
Video Recorder
(DVR) |
Also known as a
personal video recorder (PVR) or hard disk video
recorder. DVRs store recordings on a large hard
drive, and most let you pause and replay live
television. When used with an electronic program
guide service, you can find and record shows
automatically. |
Direct
Drive (DD) |
Dynamic Host
Configuration Protocol; lets network
administrators manage centrally and automate the
assignment of IP addresses in an organization's
network. |
DHCP |
Dynamic Host
Configuration Protocol; lets network
administrators manage centrally and automate the
assignment of IP addresses in an organization's
network. |
DNS |
Domain Name
System. A general purpose distributed,
replicated, data query service. Its principal
use is the lookup of host IP addresses based on
host names. |
DSP |
Digital Signal
Processing. It usually refers to the electronic
circuit section of a camera capable of
processing or enhancing signals.
|
Dwell
Time |
The length of
time a switcher displays one camera before
sequencing to the next. |
EIA |
Electronic
Industries Association. American standard for
B/W camera system. |
Electronic Iris
(EI) |
This is an
electronic implementation of an auto iris. It
uses electronics to simulate the effect of
opening and closing the iris, by increasing or
decreasing the effective shutter time of the
camera. |
Electronic Shutter
(ES) |
Compensates for
moderate light changes in indoor applications
without the use of auto iris lenses.
|
Ethernet
|
The most widely
installed Local Area Network (LAN) technology.
Specified in a standard IEEE802.3.10/100 BASE-T,
the most commonly installed Ethernet system,
provides transmission speed up to 100 megabits
per second. |
External
Sync. |
An external sync
allows a piece of equipment to take its video
synchronisation from another unit, so that it
can align itself with the system as a
whole. |
Extranet |
A private
network. It uses the Internet Protocol to
securely share part of a business information
with suppliers, vendors or others.
|
Field |
One video frame
is composed of two fields; one field consists of
the odd numbered lines in the frame and the
other field consists of the even numbered lines.
|
Focal
Length (FL) |
The distance
between the optical centre of a lens and the
principal convergent focus point.
|
Format |
The size of the
cameras imager. Current standards are 1/2, 1/3,
1/4 inches. |
Frame |
A whole video
image; is composed of two interlaced fields. A
CCD chip produces 30 frames per second at NTSC
system and 25 frames at PAL.
|
Gamma |
Degree of
contrast in a video picture between output
magnitude and input magnitude.
|
HAD |
Hole Accumulated
Diode. A type of CCD sensor with a layer
designed to accumulate holes (in the electronic
sense), thus reducing noise level.
|
HDCP
|
High-Bandwidth
Digital Content Protection. HDCP encryption is
used with high-resolution signals over DVI and
HDMI connections to prevent unauthorized
duplication of copyrighted material.
|
HUB |
As a network
product, a hub may include a group of modem
cards for dial-in users, a gateway card for
connections to a Local Area Network (LAN), and a
connection to a line. |
ICMP |
Internet Control
Message Protocol. A message control and
error-reporting protocol. |
Image
Device |
The detector in
the camera, either a tube or CCD solid state
device. |
Image
size |
Reference to the
size of an image formed by the lens onto the
camera pickup device. The current standards are:
1", 2/3", 1/2" and 1/3" measured
diagonally. |
Interlace |
PAL video
signals transmit odd and even lines alternately.
This is a 2:1 interlace. The two sets of lines
are combined to form each single
frame. |
Internal
Sync. |
Devices with
internal sync, have an internal crystal to
provide sync pulses, without needing reference
from any external device. |
Infra Red
(IR) |
Low frequency
light below the visible spectrum. This is often
used for covert or semi-covert surveillance to
provide a light source for cameras to record
images in dark or zero light
conditions. |
ISDN |
Integrated
Service Digital Network. A set of standard for
digital transmission over ordinary telephone
copper wire. |
IP |
Internet
Protocol. A set of rules to send and receive
messages at the Internet address level.
|
Iris |
This is a
mechanical device that adjusts to vary the
amount of light passing through the lens of a
camera. |
JPEG |
JPEG is a
standard for coding/compression of still
pictures. It is used in the CCTV systems to
compress and store individual frames of
video. |
Lens |
An optical
device for focusing a desired scene onto the
imaging device in a CCTV camera.
|
Line
Lock |
In CCTV, this
usually refers to multiple cameras being powered
by a common alternative current (AC) source
(either 24 V AC, 110 V AC or 240 V AC) and
consequently have field frequencies locked to
the same AC source frequency (50 Hz in CCIR
systems and 60 Hz in EIA systems).
|
Loop |
This refers to
connecting an additional device in parallel with
an existing video cable. For example, when
driving a video recorder as well as a monitor
from the same video signal. |
Lux |
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 m2. It is also
known as lumens per square meter. One lux is
equal to approximately 0.09290 foot candle.
|
Matrix
Switcher |
This is a device
that allows any of its camera inputs to be
switched to one or more of its monitor outputs.
The outputs can of course also be video
recorders. |
Monitor |
The device used
to view video pictures. These devices do not
normally have television RF frequency receivers.
They normally have composite, or component video
inputs. |
Monochrome |
This refers to a
black and white image rather than a color
one. |
Motorized
Lens |
A camera lens
equipped with small electric motor that enables
focusing lens, opening or closing the iris
diaphragm, or changing the focal length.
|
MPEG |
MPEG is a
standard used for coding and compression of
moving images. It was developed by the Moving
Pictures Experts Group. It is now used widely
for the compression of video images. However
MPEG isn't just one standard. They have
developed several standards for different uses.
For example MPEG-2 is used for DVD's and set top
boxes. MPEG-4 was developed for multi-media
applications for fixed and mobile web
applications. |
Multiplexer |
This is a device
that takes inputs from 2 or more video channels
and combines them into one signal. This is often
done by using time division multiplexing, which
interleaves frames from each channel in such a
way that they can be split out again. Frequency
division multiplexing uses different frequencies
to achieve the separation of the
signals. |
Network
Camera |
This refers to a
camera that is designed to record pictures and
transmit them directly over a computer network
or dialup internet connection. Network cameras
normally do not have any analogue video outputs.
The images are encoded directly in one of the
standard compression techniques, such as JPEG or
MPEG. |
Noise
|
Undesired
signals that corrupt the original video signals
and may reduce the image quality.
|
NTSC |
This is standard
for TV signals developed by the National
Television Standards Committee in the USA. The
UK and Europe, use a similar, but different
standard known as PAL. |
PAL |
This is the
standard for TV signals used in the UK. It
stands for Phase Alternating
Line. |
Pan and
Tilt |
A camera
mounting device that allows movement in both
side ways and up or down. |
Pinhole
Lens |
This is a type
of lens with a very small aperture. Normally
used for covert applications, where it can
easily hide behind or within another
object. |
Pixel |
The smallest
cell or area in a picture. The greater number of
pixels, the higher the resolution of the
scene. |
PPPoE
|
Point-to-Point
Protocol over Ethernet. |
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. |
Quad |
A device that
compresses up to 4 video signals and
simultaneously displays them on a
monitor. |
RARP |
Reverse Address
Resolution Protocol. For host machines that
don't know their IP address.
|
RCA |
A device on the
internet that determines the next network point
to which a data should be forwarded.
|
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. It
may also refer to the hand held controls for
some VCRs and other CCTV
equipment. |
Router |
A device on the
internet that determines the next network point
to which a data should be forwarded.
|
RS-232 |
A format of
digital communication using a three wire
unbalanced presentation. The RS-232 standard
defines the presentation and voltages 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 computers, CCTV and communications
between keyboards and matrix switchers.
|
RS-422 |
This is
an advanced format of digital communication when
compared to RS-232. A major difference is
that the presentation is balanced line and the
signaling is differential. In simple terms, the
signal transmitted is read at the receiving end
as the difference between the two wires without
a reference to earth. So if there is
common mode noise induced along the line, it
will be cancelled out. RS-422 can drive
lines of up to 1200m and distribute data on to
up to 10 receivers. |
RS-4855 |
This is an
advanced format of digital communications
compared to RS-232. It is a balanced line
transmission system. The major improvement over
RS422 is in the number of receivers that can be
driven with this format, up to 32. It is
classically a half. |
Serial
Interface |
A digital
communications interface in which data are
transmitted and received sequentially along a
single wire or pair of wires. Common serial
interface standards are RS-232 and RS-422.
|
S/N
Ratio |
Signal to Noise
Ratio. This is the ratio between the signal
strength and the noise levels on an audio or
video signal. |
SMTP |
Simple Mail
Transfer Protocol. TCP/IP used in sending and
receiving e-mail. |
S-Video
|
Transmits
luminance and color portions separately, using
multiple wires, thus avoiding the color encoding
process and its inevitable loss of picture
quality. |
TCP/IP |
Transmission
Control Protocol / Internet Protocol. The basic
communication language or protocol of the
Internet. |
Time/Date
Generator |
Installed
between a CCTV camera and a monitor, it
generates the information of Date, Time and
camera ID. |
Time-Lapse VCR |
Video recorder
that can record frames with pauses between them
thereby extending the time that a standard
cassette will hold. |
Termination |
This refers to a
75 Ohm terminator that is used to terminate each
end of a video line. |
Television Lines
(TVL) |
This is a
measure of the resolution of a video device.
Higher number is higher resolution. 380 TVL is
considered medium resolution. 470 TVL or greater
is considered high
resolution. |
Twisted-pair |
A cable composed
of two small insulated conductors twisted
together. Since both wires have nearly equal
exposure to any interference, common mode noise
is high, but the differential noise is slight
thus common mode noise is rejected in a twisted
pair line. Twisted pair cable is used for
balanced line transmission.
|
Vari-Focal |
This refers to a
type of lens that has the facility to change the
focal length. This allows adjustment of the
magnification and field of view of the
camera. |
Videocassette
Recorder (VCR) |
A device that
accepts signals from a video camera / microphone
and records video/audio on magnetic tape in a
cassette. The VCR can play back recorded
video/audio on a television set or CCTV monitor.
|
Motion
Detection |
A system that
uses the video signal from a camera to determine
if there is any movement in the picture and set
of an alarm. |
Video
Switcher |
Switcher or
Sequential Switcher. A device that allows the
video signals from multiple cameras to be
displayed on a monitor, or recorded on a VCR one
at a time in sequence. |
Video
Server |
This is a device
that accepts inputs from CCTV cameras using the
PAL, composite video signal. It digitizes the
signal and then transmits images via a network,
dialup or GSM connection. Advanced video servers
have built-in video motion detection, and can
buffer images while they are being uploaded to a
remote server, where they are
recorded. |
Wavelets |
This is a
compression technique used to give high
compression without degrading the image
quality. |
Y/C |
A method of
sending video pictures in 2 separate parts down
2 separate cables. The component parts are Y and
C. |
Zoom
Lens |
A lens of
continuously variable focal length.
|
Zoom
ratio |
The ratio of the
starting focal length (wide position) to the
ending focal length (telephoto position) of a
zoom lens. A lens with a 10X zoom ratio will
magnify the image at the wide angle end by 10
times. |