Dictionary Definition
distort
Verb
4 affect as in thought or feeling; "My personal
feelings color my judgment in this case"; "The sadness tinged his
life" [syn: tinge,
color, colour]
5 alter the shape of (something) by stress; "His
body was deformed by leprosy" [syn: deform, strain]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Verb
- To bring something out of shape
- To give false account of
- In their articles, journalists sometimes distort the truth.
Related terms
Translations
- Finnish: vääristää (1, 2), vääristellä (2)
- French: déformer (1,2)
- German: verzerren (1,2)
- Italian: deformare
- Norwegian: forvrenge (1,2)
- Portuguese: distorcer (1,2)
Extensive Definition
A distortion is the alteration of the original
shape (or other characteristic) of an object, image, sound,
waveform or other form of information or representation. Distortion
is usually unwanted. In some fields, distortion is desirable, such
as electric
guitar (where distortion is often induced purposely with the
amplifier
or an electronic effect to achieve the electric guitar's desired,
electrifying, aggressive sound). The slight distortion of analog
tapes and
vacuum
tubes is considered pleasing in certain situations. The
addition of noise or
other extraneous signals (hum, interference)
is not considered to be distortion, though the effects of
distortion are sometimes considered noise.
Electronic signals
In telecommunication
and signal
processing, a noise-free "system" can be characterised by a
transfer
function, such that the output y(t) can be written as a
function of the input x as
- y(t) = F(x(t))
- y(t) = A\cdot x(t-T)
the output is undistorted. Distortion occurs when
the transfer function F is more complicated than this. If F is a
linear function, for instance a filter whose gain and/or delay
varies with frequency, then the signal will experience linear
distortion. Linear distortion will not change the shape of a single
sinuosoid, but will usually change the shape of a multi-tone
signal.
This diagram shows the behaviour of a signal
(made up of a square wave
followed by a sine wave) as
it is passed through various distorting functions.
- The first trace (in black) shows the input. It also shows the output from a non-distorting transfer function (straight line).
- A high-pass filter (green trace) will distort the shape of a square wave by reducing its low frequency components. This is the cause of the "droop" seen on the top of the pulses. This "pulse distortion" can be very significant when a train of pulses must pass through an AC-coupled (high-pass filtered) amplifier. As the sine wave contains only one frequency, its shape is unaltered.
- A low-pass filter (blue trace) will round the pulses by removing the high frequency components. All systems are low pass to some extent. Note that the phase of the sine wave is different for the lowpass and the highpass cases, due to the phase distortion of the filters.
- A slightly non-linear transfer function (purple), this one is gently compressing as may be typical of a tube audio amplifier, will compress the peaks of the sine wave. This will cause small amounts of low order harmonics to be generated.
- A hard-clipping transfer function (red) will generate high order harmonics. Parts of the transfer function are flat, which indicates that all information about the input signal has been lost in this region.
The transfer function of an ideal amplifier, with
perfect gain and delay, is only an approximation. The true behavior
of the system is usually different. Nonlinearities in
the transfer function of an active
device (such as vacuum tubes,
transistors, and
operational
amplifiers) are a common source of non-linear distortion; in
passive components
(such as a coaxial
cable or optical
fiber), linear distortion can be caused by inhomogeneities, reflections,
and so on in the propagation
path.
Amplitude distortion
Amplitude distortion is distortion occurring in a
system, subsystem, or
device when the output
amplitude is not a linear
function of the input
amplitude under specified conditions.
Frequency distortion
This form of distortion occurs when different
frequencies are amplified by different amounts, mainly caused by
combination of active device and components.
For example, the non-uniform frequency response curve of RC-coupled
cascade
amplifier is an example of frequency distortion.
Phase distortion
This form of distortion mostly occurs due to the
reactive component, such as capacitive
reactance or inductor capacitance. Here, all the
components of the input signal are not amplified with the same
phase shift, hence causing some parts of the output signal to be
out of phase with the rest of the output.
Group delay distortion
Can be found only in dispersive
media. In a waveguide, propagation
velocity varies with frequency. In a filter, group delay tends
to peak near the cut-off
frequency, resulting in pulse distortion. When analog long
distance trunks were commonplace, for example in 12
channel carrier, group delay distortion had to be corrected in
repeaters.
Correction of distortion
As the system output is given by y(t) = F(x(t)),
then if the inverse function F-1 can be found, and used
intentionally to distort either the input or the output of the
system, then the distortion will be corrected.
An example of such correction is where
LP/Vinyl
recordings or FM audio
transmissions are deliberately pre-emphasised by a linear
filter, the reproducing system applies an inverse filter to
make the overall system undistorted.
Correction is not possible if the inverse does
not exist, for instance if the transfer
function has flat spots (the inverse would map multiple input
points to a single output point). This results in a loss of
information, which is uncorrectable. Such a situation can occur
when an amplifier is overdriven, resulting in clipping or slew rate
distortion, when for a moment the output is determined by the
characteristics of the amplifier alone, and not by the input
signal.
Teletypewriter or modem signaling
In binary
signaling such as FSK, distortion is the
shifting of the significant instants of the signal pulses from
their proper positions relative to the beginning of the start
pulse. The magnitude of
the distortion is expressed in percent of an ideal unit pulse length. This is sometimes
called 'bias' distortion.
Telegraphic distortion is a similar older
problem, distorting the ratio between "mark" and "space" intervals.
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Audio distortion
In this context, distortion refers to any kind of
deformation of a waveform, compared to an input. Clipping,
compression,
non-linear behavior of electronic components, modulation, aliasing, and mixing phenomena or power supply
inefficiencies can cause distortion.
In most fields, distortion is characterized as
unwanted change to a signal.
Gabber
Distortion is one of the most important elements
of Gabber
music. Distortion filters are usually added on drum patterns and
bass lines to achieve a very hard and raw sound.
Guitar sound
Distortion is an important part of an electric guitar's sound in many musical genres, including rock, hard rock, punk rock, garage punk, psychedelic rock and heavy metal. Typically, the signal coming from the guitar is distorted by a "clipping" of its waveform. This can either be done with an effects pedal that is connected between the guitar and its amplifier or by the amplifier itself working on higher gain-settings in the pre-amplifier.Optics
In optics, image
distortion is a divergence from rectilinear
projection caused by a change in magnification with
increasing distance from the optical axis
of an optical system.
Map projections
In cartography, a distortion is the misrepresentation of the area or shape of a feature. The Mercator projection, for example, distorts Greenland because of its high latitude, in the sense that its shape and size are not the same as those on a globe.See also
- Aliasing
- Amplitude distortion
- Attenuation distortion
- Bias distortion
- Crossover distortion
- Degree of isochronous distortion
- Delay distortion
- Distortion-limited operation
- Distortion (guitar)
- Distortion power factor
- Image warping
- Intermodulation distortion
- Lossy compression
- Overdrive (music)
- Quantization distortion
- Signal-to-noise-and-distortion (SINAD)
- Total harmonic distortion — a measurement of the amount of distortion in a sinusoidal waveform
- Valve sound
References
External links
distort in Bulgarian: Дисторш
distort in Danish: Distortion
distort in German: Verzerrung (Akustik)
distort in Spanish: Distorsión
distort in Finnish: Särö
distort in French: Distorsion
distort in Hebrew: דיסטורשן (עיוות)
distort in Japanese: 歪み (電子機器)
distort in Portuguese: Distorção
distort in Russian: Искажения сигнала
distort in Swedish: Distorsion
(teleteknik)
distort in Turkish: Distorsiyon
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
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prejudice the issue, prepossess, prostitute, pull, rationalize, ravage, ravish, reason ill, refract, scab, scar, scarify, scatter, screw, skew, slant, split, spring, squeeze, strain, strain the sense,
sway, taint, tamper with, titivate, torture, travesty, trick out, turn, turn awry, twist, twist the words, ulcerate, understate, unform, unshape, varnish, violate, vitiate, vulgarize, warp, whitewash, wind, wrench, wrest, wring, writhe, zigzag