In
electrical circuits,
ringing is an
oscillation of a
voltage or
current. Ringing can be undesirable because it causes extra current to flow, thereby wasting energy and causing extra heating of the components; it can cause unwanted
electromagnetic radiation to be emitted; it can increase
settling time for the desired final state; and it may cause unwanted triggering of bistable elements in
digital circuits. Ringy communications circuits may suffer
falsing. Two electrical sources of this ringing are: • A
resonant transient response due to undesired
parasitic capacitances and
inductances in the circuit creating a resonant
frequency. This is often the
damping response following
overshoot or undershoot, and thus these related concepts are at times conflated. This ringing can be reduced by a slower
slew rate and possibly eliminated by critically dampening the resonance. •
Signal reflection, which may be minimized by
impedance matching. While either issue can be addressed with a series
termination resistor, a resistor cannot simultaneously critically damp the response and perfectly match the impedance without losing some power on the series resistor, so a
bypass capacitor may be preferred. ==Analog video==