In telecommunication, the term halftone characteristic has the following meanings: 1.
* In facsimile systems, the relationship between the density of the recorded copy and the density of the object, i.e., the original. 2.
* In facsimile systems, the relationship between the amplitude of the facsimile signal to either the density of the object or the density of the recorded copy when only a portion of the system is under consideration. In an FM facsimile system, an appropriate parameter other than the amplitude is used. See also: halftone
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| - In telecommunication, the term halftone characteristic has the following meanings: 1.
* In facsimile systems, the relationship between the density of the recorded copy and the density of the object, i.e., the original. 2.
* In facsimile systems, the relationship between the amplitude of the facsimile signal to either the density of the object or the density of the recorded copy when only a portion of the system is under consideration. In an FM facsimile system, an appropriate parameter other than the amplitude is used. See also: halftone
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| - In telecommunication, the term halftone characteristic has the following meanings: 1.
* In facsimile systems, the relationship between the density of the recorded copy and the density of the object, i.e., the original. 2.
* In facsimile systems, the relationship between the amplitude of the facsimile signal to either the density of the object or the density of the recorded copy when only a portion of the system is under consideration. In an FM facsimile system, an appropriate parameter other than the amplitude is used. See also: halftone Source: from Federal Standard 1037C and from MIL-STD-188
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