Oscilloscope Tutorial
Oscilloscope Tutorial
Oscilloscopes
Scope (Cont)
This simple graph can tell you many things about a signal:
You can determine the time and voltage values of a signal.
You can calculate the frequency of an oscillating signal.
You can see the "moving parts" of a circuit represented by the
signal.
You can tell if a malfunctioning component is distorting the signal.
You can find out how much of a signal is direct current (DC) or
alternating current (AC).
You can tell how much of the signal is noise and whether the noise
is changing with time.
If a signal repeats, it has a frequency. The frequency is measured in Hertz (Hz) and
equals the number of times the signal repeats itself in one second
Performance Terms
Bandwidth
The bandwidth specification tells you the frequency range the oscilloscope accurately measures.
Rise Time
Rise time may be a more appropriate performance consideration when you expect to measure pulses
and steps. An oscilloscope cannot accurately display pulses with rise times faster than the specified
rise time of the oscilloscope.
Vertical Sensitivity
The vertical sensitivity indicates how much the vertical amplifier can amplify a weak signal. Vertical
sensitivity is usually given in millivolts (mV) per division.
Sweep Speed
For analog oscilloscopes, this specification indicates how fast the trace can sweep across the screen,
allowing you to see fine details. The fastest sweep speed of an oscilloscope is usually given in
nanoseconds/div.
Gain Accuracy
The gain accuracy indicates how accurately the vertical system attenuates or amplifies a signal.
Time Base or Horizontal Accuracy
The time base or horizontal accuracy indicates how accurately the horizontal system displays the
timing of a signal.
Sample Rate
On digital oscilloscopes, the sampling rate indicates how many samples per second the ADC can
acquire. Maximum sample rates are usually given in megasamples per second (MS/s). The faster the
oscilloscope can sample, the more accurately it can represent fine details in a fast signal..
ADC Resolution (Or Vertical Resolution)
The resolution, in bits, of the ADC indicates how precisely it can turn input voltages into digital
values.
Record Length
The record length of a digital oscilloscope indicates how many waveform points the oscilloscope is
able to acquire for one waveform record.
Grounding
Scope Probes
Most passive probes have some degree of attenuation factor, such as 10X,
100X, and so on. By convention, attenuation factors, such as for the 10X
attenuator probe, have the X after the factor.
In contrast, magnification factors like X10 have the X first
Vertical Controls
Input Coupling
Coupling means the method used to connect an
electrical signal from one circuit to another.
Horizontal Controls
Trigger Position
The trigger position control may be located in the horizontal control section of
your oscilloscope. It actually represents "the horizontal position of the trigger
in the waveform record." Horizontal trigger position control is only available
on digital oscilloscopes.
Varying the horizontal trigger position allows you to capture what a signal did
before a trigger event (called pretrigger viewing).
n contrast, analog oscilloscopes only display the signal after receiving the
trigger.
Multimeter tutorial
Digital Multimeters
Digital meters give an output in numbers, usually on a liquid
crystal display.
Most modern multimeters are digital and traditional analogue
types are destined to become obsolete.
Digital multimeters come in a wide range of sizes and
capability. Everything from simple 3 digit auto ranging
pocket meters to larger 8 digit bench model with operator
or computer (IEEE488 compatible) settable range selection
Function Generator
Sine wave
Square wave
Pulse trains
Sawtooth
Amplitude characteristics
Bandwidth
Adjustments of rise and fall times
Modulation capability (AM, FM, Pulse, etc.)
Power Supply
This is the device that transfers electric power from a
source to a load using electronic circuits.
Typical application of power supplies is to convert utility's
AC input power to a regulated voltage(s) required for
electronic equipment.
Depending on the mode of operation of power
semiconductors PS can be linear or switching.
In a switched-mode power supply, or SMPS power
handling electronic components are continuously switching
on and off with high frequency in order to provide the
transfer of electric energy. By varying duty cycle,
frequency or a phase of these transitions an output
parameter (such as output voltage) is controlled. Typical
frequency range of SMPS is from 20 kHz to several MHz.
Voltage levels
Current
Regulation
Protection
Output impedance
Noise (ripple)
Oscilloscope
Oscilloscope(continue)
DEMO.Lab3a