common mode rejection ratio. a measure of common mode rejection, and therefore, ideally, of the ability to reject noise
COMMON MODE REJECTION RATIO. The ability of an instrument to reject interference from a common voltage at its input terminals with respect to ground. Usually expressed in decibels at a frequency.
Common Mode Rejection Ratio. A measure of the ability of an input stage to reject signal introduced equally onto both wires of a balanced (q.v.) input.
Common Mode Rejection Ratio. A measure in decibels of the effectiveness of a circuit in rejecting a common mode voltage.
common mode rejection ratio. A measure of the ability of a detector to damp out the effect of a common-mode-generated interference voltage; usually expressed in decibels.
The boardâ€(tm)s ability to measure only the difference between the leads of a transducer, rejecting what the leads have in common. The higher the CMRR, the better the accuracy.
Common Mode Rejection Ratio, a measure on balanced inputs of how well a differential amplifier rejects a signal, which appears simultaneously, and in-phase at both input terminals. As a specification, CMRR is specified in dB at a given frequency range.
Abbreviation for Common-Mode Rejection Ratio.
Common Mode Rejection Ratio. A measure of the quality of the amplifier with differential inputs and defined as the ratio between the common-mode gain and the differential gain.
Common-mode rejection ratio. A measure of an op-amp´s ability to reject signals that appear the same on both inputs. The ratio of open-loop gain to common-mode gain.
Common-mode rejection ratio. A measure of an instrument's ability to reject interference from a common-mode signal, usually expressed in decibels (dB).