A sampling rate is a term that is used in digital recording to describe how much, and how often, data is used. In digital audio (sound recording), a new sample of analog data -- a new speaker position -- is sent out to the speaker quite often, usually at a sample rate of 44100 Samples/second. So when the music is recorded for a CD, a new sample is collected from the microphones just as often, usually at a sample rate of 44,100 Samples/second. A biologist may measure the temperature of a lake once a week. That temperature data has a sampling rate is 1 Sample/week. Sampling rate is independent of "channels" or "bit resolution". A highly instrumented concert may have a dozen channels, each one from a microphone sampled at 44100 Samples/second, but the total sampling rate is still 44,100 Samples/second.
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It stays the same. Temperature has no effect on the rate of nuclear decay.
Bradycardia is the medical term meaning abnormally low heart rate.
heterogeneous mixture
biopsy? excise/excision?
Nothing, since there is no such term. Check your notes and resubmit your question.
Power is the rate of doing work
sample rate difference. they have to be set to the same sample rate
Decimation in digital processing is the process wherein sampling rate of a signal is reduced. An increase in sample rate is complementary to interpolation.
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With a good sample, the sample mean gets closer to the population mean.
The Coefficient of Variation is a ratio showing the degree to which individual points of data in a sample deviate from the mean. It is calculated by taking the standard deviation of the sample and dividing that by the mean of the sample. It can be useful for comparing different data sets because it is a ratio (or percentage) and not an absolute number.
containing combined water; hydrated.
Birth rate means the amount of baby's that were born in a certain period of time
The sample mean may differ from the population mean, especially for small samples.
The term Official Cash Rate (OCR) is one that is used in Australia and New Zealand. It is used to describe the bank rate and interest rate a bank charges on overnight loans given to commercial banks.