D/A converters change digital signals into analog signals.
Digital Data:
Analog Data (Natural Events):
D/A converters are used in:
Analog to Digital Converters (A/D Converters)
An A/D converter changes analog signals (usually voltage) from things in the world into digital signals.
This process has different steps, like sampling (taking regular measurements), quantization (assigning digital values to measurements), and coding (putting the digital values into a form that a computer can understand).
The A/D converter takes the analog signal and chops it up into pieces at specific moments. These pieces are then turned into digital values. The "resolution" of an A/D converter tells us how many different values it can make from a range of analog ones, usually shown by the number of bits. For example, in a 3-bit A/D converter, the highest value (b2) is called the Most Significant Bit (MSB) and the lowest (b0) is the Least Significant Bit (LSB).
The graph below shows how the analog input relates to the digital output.
The first change in the digital signal (from 000 to 001) below 0.5 LSB is called the zero scale, while the last change (from 110 to 111) is called the full scale. The space between zero and full scale is the full scale range.
Sampling:
Quantization:
Coding:
Once we have the numbers, we turn them into binary using an Encoder.
A/D converters are used in:
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