GL–2 • Glossary of Terms
Synergy Series Installation Guide (v18)
Field Frequency
— The rate at which one complete field is scanned, approximately 50 times
per second in 625 video, or 60 times per second in 525 video.
Frame
— One complete picture consisting of two fields of interlaced scanning lines.
GPI
— An abbreviation for General Purpose Interface, a device that typically allows remote
control of the switcher’s automatic transition functions.
Hue
— The characteristic of a color signal that determines whether the color is red, yellow,
green, blue, purple, etc. (the three characteristics of a TV color signal are chrominance,
luminance, and hue). White, black, and gray are not considered hues.
Internal Key
— The use of a primary input to produce a key effect.
Key
— An effect produced by “cutting a hole” in background video, then filling the hole with
video or matte from another source. Key source video cuts the hole, key fill video fills the hole.
The video signal used for cut and fill can come from the same or separate sources.
Key Fill
— A video input which is timed to “fill the hole” provided by the key source video. An
example of key fill is the video output of a character generator.
Key Invert
— An effect that reverses the polarity of the key source so that the holes in the
background are cut by dark areas of the key source instead of bright areas. The
KEY INV
push-button selects this effect.
Key Mask
— A keying technique in which a pattern is combined with the key source to block
out unwanted portions of the key source.
Key Source
— The video signal which “cuts a hole” in the background video to make a key
effect possible. Also called “Key Video”. In practice, this signal controls when a video mixer
circuit will switch from background to key fill video.
Key Video
— See Key Source.
Linear Keys
— Linear keys make it possible to fully specify the transparency of a key from
opaque, through transparent, to fully off. The transparency is specified by the key signal (also
known as the “hole cutter” or “alpha channel”) that is associated with the key fill. A keyer
capable of a linear key converts the key signal voltage directly to the transparency effect on the
screen. Our switcher’s
KEY MEM
button allows the user to store the CLIP and GAIN settings
required to match the incoming key signal to the keyer’s requirements.
Line Frequency
— The number of horizontal scans per second. For 525 line 60 Hz systems,
this is approximately 15734 scans per second.
Luminance Key
— An effect in which video from one source is replaced by video that exceeds
a set level in a second video source.
Mask
— See Key Mask.
Matte
— A solid color signal that is generated by the switcher and can be adjusted for hue,
saturation, and luminance levels.
Matte Key
— A key effect in which the fill video is matte, provided by one of the switcher’s
matte generators.
Memory
— The memory feature provides storage and recall of complete switcher setups.
Содержание Synergy 2 SD
Страница 1: ...Ross Video Limited Installation Guide Volume I Software Issue 18...
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Страница 18: ...viii Contents Synergy Series Installation Guide v18...
Страница 88: ...2 44 Installation Synergy Series Installation Guide v18...
Страница 122: ...4 18 Preliminary Video Installation Synergy Series Installation Guide v18...
Страница 132: ...5 10 Using the Menu System Synergy Series Installation Guide v18...
Страница 156: ...6 24 BNC Configuration and Check Synergy Series Installation Guide v18...
Страница 292: ...9 62 Additional Installation Setups Synergy Series Installation Guide v18...
Страница 326: ...11 10 Still Stores Synergy Series Installation Guide v18...
Страница 346: ...12 20 Editors OverDrive Synergy Series Installation Guide v18...
Страница 394: ...GL 4 Glossary of Terms Synergy Series Installation Guide v18...