Detectable sensor items refer to the discrete, identifiable objects or phenomena within an environment that are designed or capable of eliciting a specific, measurable response from one or more sensing modalities. These items are characterized by their physical properties, such as spectral reflectance, thermal signature, acoustic reflection, electromagnetic field interaction, or chemical composition, which enable them to be distinguished from background clutter or noise. The detectability is con...
Turbo suction mode represents a transient operational state within certain advanced air conditioning (AC) systems, engineered to achieve rapid and enhanced air intake and circulation beyond standard parameters. This mode is typically activated by user command or automatically by intelligent system algorithms when specific environmental conditions, such as high ambient temperature or significant thermal load, are detected. The primary objective is to accelerate the rate of air exchange within a d...
The term "Minimum noise produced" quantifies the lowest sound pressure level an active system, component, or device is engineered to generate under specified operating conditions. This metric is critically important in applications where acoustic comfort, operational discretion, or data integrity are paramount. It is not merely an absence of sound but a precisely measurable characteristic, often defined by international standards and expressed in decibels (dB), typically on a weighted scale (e.g...
The auto shut-off timer capability refers to a system or device's inherent functionality to automatically cease operation or transition to a low-power state after a predetermined period of inactivity or a set duration. This feature is fundamentally a form of automated power management, crucial for energy conservation, operational safety, and the prevention of unintended resource consumption. It operates by integrating a timekeeping mechanism, often a hardware timer or a software-based scheduler,...