Doug's answer is pretty comprehensive; I thought I'd add in an additional note (at the OP's request, off of my comment)
Doug's answer explains why 1x1 pixel beacons are used for the purpose they are used for; I thought I'd outline a potential alternative approach, which is to use HTTP Status Code 204, No Content, for a response, and not send an image body.
204 No Content
The server has fulfilled the request
but does not need to return an
entity-body, and might want to return
updated metainformation. The response
MAY include new or updated
metainformation in the form of
entity-headers, which if present
SHOULD be associated with the
requested variant.
Basically, the server receives the request, and decides to not send a body (in this case, to not send an image). But it replies with a code to inform the agent that this was a conscious decision; basically, its just a shorter way to respond affirmatively.
From Google's Page Speed documentation:
One popular way of recording page
views in an asynchronous fashion is to
include a JavaScript snippet at the
bottom of the target page (or as an
onload event handler), that notifies a
logging server when a user loads the
page. The most common way of doing
this is to construct a request to the
server for a "beacon", and encode all
the data of interest as parameters in
the URL for the beacon resource. To
keep the HTTP response very small, a
transparent 1x1-pixel image is a good
candidate for a beacon request. A
slightly more optimal beacon would use
an HTTP 204 response ("no content")
which is marginally smaller than a 1x1
GIF.
I've never tried it, but in theory it should serve the same purpose without requiring the gif itself to be transmitted, saving you 35 bytes, in the case of Google Analytics. (In the scheme of things, unless you're Google Analytics serving many trillions of hits per day, 35 bytes is really nothing.)
You can test it with this code:
var i = new Image();
i.src = "http://httpstat.us/204";
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