Jitter is the variability in the timing of the presentation of each new data bit or word as presented to the D/A circuit/chip for conversion. These bits/words ideally are presented to the D/A at precise time intervals depending on the sample-rate of the data stream. These time intervals are all equal over a long period of time, but from one to the next, these intervals vary. They are only precise over a long period such as seconds. The more the time intervals vary, the more distortion is introduced into the D/A conversion. This is jitter. Just like errors in the voltage can introduce distortion, short-term errors in the timing can introduce distortion.
D/A conversion comprises several actions:
1) a voltage is generated based on a data word
2) a timing of the presentation of that voltage is reproduced
3) filtering of the "stairsteps’ in time that result
Steve N.
Empirical Audio