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sine wave A smooth, continuously moving waveshape that has no break in its appearance. It has positive and negative half-cycles that are generally symmetrical with respect to a reference. The cyclical repetition of these waves produces a waveshape that has a specified frequency in hertz (number of cycles per second) and a specified amplitude.
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sine wave The basic signal waveform. In analog data communications, the carrier signal on the telephone line is a type of sine wave.
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Sinemet A formulation combining levodopa and carbidopa
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sine wave A signal put out by an oscillator in which the voltage or equivalent rises and falls smoothly and symmetrically, following the trigonometric formula for the sine function. Sub-audio sine waves are used to modulate other waveforms to produce vibrato and tremolo. Audio-range sine waves contain only the fundamental frequency, with no overtones, and thus can form the building blocks for more complex sounds.
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sine wave the most basic waveform, consisting of a single partial. Forms the basis of all complex, periodic sounds.
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