Delay line

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The term delay line has multiple meanings:

  • In electronics and derivative fields such as telecommunications, a delay line is rigorously defined as a single-input-channel device, in which the output channel state at a given instant, t, is the same as the input channel state at the instant tn, where n is a number of time units, i.e., the input sequence undergoes a delay of n time units, such as n femtoseconds, nanoseconds, or microseconds. (The delay line may have additional taps yielding output channels with values less than n.) In other words, the device introduces a delay of a certain amount of time between its input and output. Specific devices and approaches:
  • In Optics : delay lines
  • In sound reenforcement, the delay line refers to the system of loudspeakers used to supplement the main delivery system in areas where it does not reach effectively, such as the back of a large (deep) room, or underneath a balcony. The speakers are sent a signal that has been delayed in relation to the mains.
  • In neurobiology, delay lines can refer to neurons, the cells that transmit electrical information in the brain. Electrical conduction in neurons is not instantaneous; it is delayed depending on the length of the axon and other properties of the neuron (e.g. myelination). This delay can be used for time sensitive calculations; the canonical example is the calculation of inter-aural time differences in the pons, used for sound localization.

An earlier version of this page came from Federal Standard 1037C and from MIL-STD-188.