System information
Frame Rate (Video)
The speed at which individual images in the video are displayed  on the screen during playback. A faster 
frame rate results in smoother  motion in the video. The television frame  rate in the US (NTSC) is 29.97 
frames per second (fps). In many parts  of Europe and Japan, the television standard is PAL at 25 fps.
Frequency Spectrum
The Frequency Spectrum of a signal refers to its range of  frequencies. In audio, the frequency range is 
basically 20 Hz to 20,000  Hz. The frequency spectrum sometimes refers to the distribution of these  
frequencies. For example, bass-heavy sounds have a large frequency content  in the low end (20 Hz - 200 
Hz) of the spectrum.
G
Gamma
Determines the brightness of the video and is used to compensate  for differences between the source and 
output video and sometimes needs  to be calibrated to match the source or destination. Higher gamma 
values  result in lighter or brighter video as displayed on your computer's monitor.
Gamut
Gamut refers to  the complete range of something. In video editing, you want to ensure  that your colors are 
within the acceptable range for your broadcast standard.  When colors are outside the NTSC or PAL gamut, 
you can introduce image  problems or noise into the video stream. You can use the video  scopes to analyze 
your video before rendering and correct out-of-gamut  colors with video plug-ins. For more information, see 
"Monitoring Video with Scopes" on page 481.
When you're using the color picker, a warning    is displayed when you choose an out-of-gamut color. 
Click the color swatch  below the warning to correct the color.
H
Hertz (Hz)
The unit of measurement for frequency or cycles per second  (CPS).
GLOSSARY639










