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Duty cycle

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In telecommunication and electronics, the term duty cycle has the following meanings:

The duty cycle D is defined as the ratio between the pulse duration and the period (T) of a rectangular waveform
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The duty cycle D is defined as the ratio between the pulse duration and the period (T) of a rectangular waveform

duty cycle [ D = \frac \ ]
where
D is the so-called duty cycle;
[\tau] is the duration that the function is non-zero;
[\Tau] is the period of the function.
For example, in an ideal pulse train (one having rectangular pulses), the duty cycle is the pulse duration divided by the pulse period. For a pulse train in which the pulse duration is 1 μs and the pulse period is 4 μs, the duty cycle is 0.25.

For another example, for a piece of electrical equipment, like an electric motor, the period for which it may be operated without deleterious effects, such as from overheating.

Pulse-width modulation (PWM) is used in some music synthesizers to vary the duty-cycle of an oscillator during the performance, which has a subtle effect on the tone colors obtained.

This article contains material from the Federal Standard 1037C (in support of MIL-STD-188), which, as a work of the United States Government, is in the public domain.

 


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