pulsbreeddomming
Pulsbreeddomming is a phenomenon in signal processing and wave propagation in which a short transient pulse broadens in time as it travels through a medium or a channel with dispersion and multipath effects. The result is a pulse that is longer in duration when it arrives than when it was emitted, often accompanied by changes in peak amplitude and shape. The term is used in contexts such as optical communications, radio and wireless channels, ultrasound imaging, and radar.
Causes of pulsbreeddomming include dispersion, where the phase velocity of different frequencies varies in the medium,
Quantification typically uses metrics such as the pulse broadening factor (ratio of output to input pulse width),
See also dispersion, impulse response, intersymbol interference, multipath, and dispersion compensation.