pulstiming
Pulstiming is a term used across several disciplines to denote the precise timing characteristics of pulses within a train of pulses or a single pulse event. In electronics and signal processing, pulstiming refers to the measurement and control of when pulses occur relative to a reference clock, including metrics such as pulse repetition frequency, duty cycle, pulse width, rise and fall times, and timing jitter. Accurate pulstiming is essential for synchronizing systems such as communications transmitters, radars, and pulsed lasers. Tools used include oscilloscopes, time interval analyzers, high-speed digitizers, and phase-locked loops. Challenges include clock instability, environmental temperature changes, and device jitter, which can degrade timing accuracy.
In physiology and medicine, pulstiming often describes the timing of physiological pulses, such as arterial or
In physics and photonics, pulstiming governs the timing of laser pulses, ultrafast spectroscopy, and time-domain reflectometry,
Etymology is informal; the term combines pulse and timing without a single formal standard across disciplines.