microduration
Microduration is a term used to describe the duration of a rapid event or process measured on the order of microseconds (10^-6 seconds), or the timing precision required to resolve such intervals. While not an SI unit, microduration is employed in fields that demand high time resolution, including electronics, optics, and ultrafast science, to characterize fast phenomena and system responses.
Measurement and instrumentation
Determining microduration relies on high-bandwidth instruments such as digital oscilloscopes, time-correlated single-photon counting systems, streak cameras,
In electronics, microduration describes switching events, pulse widths, or gate delays in high-speed circuits and data
Microduration is not a universally standardized unit and is often used informally. Definitions vary across disciplines
Time resolution, microsecond, nanosecond, ultrafast science, time-to-digital converter, oscilloscope, jitter.