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Forum Impact of scope noise when measuring signals
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Impact of scope noise when measuring signals

Andrew J
Andrew J over 4 years ago

I'm currently taking noise measurements of a working circuit and I don't really understand how my scope's noise actually impacts what I see or measure so I'm hoping someone can explain it to me in non-technical (or at least not deep technical!) language.  I've measured the scope's noise floor(??) on channel 4:

 

image

Image 1: no connections

 

Scope has no probes connected, is set to maximise capture memory and is at the smallest V div possible.  I've shown RMS and pk-pk measurements (I believe RMS is more relevant to noise, is that right?)

 

Here I'm taking a signal measurement on channel 4, with the probe set at x1 using a pig-tail and the scope configured as: AC coupled, 20MHz bandwidth, peak detect acquisition, no other probes connected or channels turned on, measurements reset to zero first:

 

image

Image 2: measured signal (core signal is 0.37mV pk-pk)

 

What I'm interested in understanding:

  1. How does the scope noise measured when the channel is disconnected from a probe - noise floor? - impact on the measured signal?
  2. How do I take that into account when interpreting the signal?  For example, could I take the mean RMS value shown in image 1, from the mean RMS value in image 2?  Does it mean the scope just isn't capable of measuring signals around the min-max RMS values?
  3. I don't touch the probe once I've started taking measurements - it's connected on test points - but even a fractional movement can change the measured signal to the extent I can't trust that I've made a proper probe connection, if that makes sense.  Specifically, the amplitude of the 'spikes' can grow or shrink although the 'core' signal remains pretty much as-is; by 'core' I mean the bright green portion of what is shown.  Does that imply anything about the spikes not related to my circuit - environment noise?  Probing issue?
    I've turned off other devices and lights in the room with no impact.  I get the same signal measuring directly across an output cap (albeit a 10uF electrolytic.)  I've zoomed in to the signal in the image below - although regular, it doesn't look like switching noise:

 

image

Image 3: measured signal in image 2 zoomed in.

 

Please correct me where I've mistyped anything in the above - it helps me make sure I research the right thing and not the thing I think is right!! 

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Top Replies

  • Gough Lui
    Gough Lui over 4 years ago +6 verified
    Can't say I'm an expert, but here goes at my understanding: How does the scope noise measured when the channel is disconnected from a probe - noise floor? - impact on the measured signal? How do I take…
  • shabaz
    shabaz over 4 years ago in reply to Andrew J +3 suggested
    Hi Andrew, The 'scope noise can be higher than the power supply you're measuring, so on it's own the 'scope isn't going to provide the measurement you need I think. Regarding your question 1, you'll see…
  • DAB
    DAB over 4 years ago +2 suggested
    You raise some good issues. Without a probe attached you are getting noise through the input connectors. first thing to do is at least put a terminating load on the input so you are not picking up noise…
Parents
  • Andrew J
    0 Andrew J over 4 years ago

    Thanks everyone - I think it’s easier to answer everyone in one response than try to do so individually: you’ve all provided some great information to get my head around.

     

    To contextualise a bit more, what I'm trying to do is measure how noisy a 5V output rail is.  I have to be careful with attaching the probe into the circuit to get what looks like a clean signal (image 2) vs something that swings around and just looks like the probe isn't connecting properly.  When I was measuring what I captured in image 2, it sort of felt too good to be true (as yet, I have a lack of empirical experience to draw upon)!  Ignoring the spikes, using cursors I measure the signal at 330uV pk-pk.  This led me to wondering if maybe I wasn't properly probing and just viewing noise generated by the scope itself: reading around the topic led me to the above approach and questions to fill in some blanks.  So my questions weren’t in relation to a specific problem or issue, they were more to do with getting a better understanding of what may be happening in general.

     

    Having said that…

     

    “In the end, your resulting signal-to-noise ratio may not be large enough to have confidence you are measuring an actual signal, rather than the oscilloscope front-end drift!”

    “The 'scope noise can be higher than the power supply you're measuring, so on it's own the 'scope isn't going to provide the measurement you need I think”

    “…with very low level signals, an amplifier is helpful”

     

    My understanding from this is that any signal that may be captured in Image 2  is buried in the noise floor, or is so small that it can’t be captured, and to actually see it I’d need to amplify it by some means?  From a practical perspective, the fact that any noise the output does have is measured in uV is fine for my purposes - to some extent it’s experimentation.

     

    “If you want to have an indication of noise floor without probes (why?)…”

    TBH Jan, only because that’s what I read!  Normally, I go to multiple sources to get answers/ideas to make sure I’m not just reading what some loony has decided to post up.  In all cases, the approach to measure the noise floor was as I described above: without probes (or anything) attached to the scope inputs.  In fact, every source I read specifically said to remove connections.

     

    I redid the tests:

    image

    [with 50Ohm terminator attached to Ch4 input - not necessarily a great one as it’s what I have and it was fairly cheap]

     

    image

    [with the probe ends shortcut]

     

    And measuring the circuit with a tin over it:

    image

     

    And zoomed in:

    image

    image

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  • Andrew J
    0 Andrew J over 4 years ago

    Thanks everyone - I think it’s easier to answer everyone in one response than try to do so individually: you’ve all provided some great information to get my head around.

     

    To contextualise a bit more, what I'm trying to do is measure how noisy a 5V output rail is.  I have to be careful with attaching the probe into the circuit to get what looks like a clean signal (image 2) vs something that swings around and just looks like the probe isn't connecting properly.  When I was measuring what I captured in image 2, it sort of felt too good to be true (as yet, I have a lack of empirical experience to draw upon)!  Ignoring the spikes, using cursors I measure the signal at 330uV pk-pk.  This led me to wondering if maybe I wasn't properly probing and just viewing noise generated by the scope itself: reading around the topic led me to the above approach and questions to fill in some blanks.  So my questions weren’t in relation to a specific problem or issue, they were more to do with getting a better understanding of what may be happening in general.

     

    Having said that…

     

    “In the end, your resulting signal-to-noise ratio may not be large enough to have confidence you are measuring an actual signal, rather than the oscilloscope front-end drift!”

    “The 'scope noise can be higher than the power supply you're measuring, so on it's own the 'scope isn't going to provide the measurement you need I think”

    “…with very low level signals, an amplifier is helpful”

     

    My understanding from this is that any signal that may be captured in Image 2  is buried in the noise floor, or is so small that it can’t be captured, and to actually see it I’d need to amplify it by some means?  From a practical perspective, the fact that any noise the output does have is measured in uV is fine for my purposes - to some extent it’s experimentation.

     

    “If you want to have an indication of noise floor without probes (why?)…”

    TBH Jan, only because that’s what I read!  Normally, I go to multiple sources to get answers/ideas to make sure I’m not just reading what some loony has decided to post up.  In all cases, the approach to measure the noise floor was as I described above: without probes (or anything) attached to the scope inputs.  In fact, every source I read specifically said to remove connections.

     

    I redid the tests:

    image

    [with 50Ohm terminator attached to Ch4 input - not necessarily a great one as it’s what I have and it was fairly cheap]

     

    image

    [with the probe ends shortcut]

     

    And measuring the circuit with a tin over it:

    image

     

    And zoomed in:

    image

    image

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