|
|
|
|
|
PicoScope Large Buffer MemoryMany competing oscilloscopes can collect only a few thousand samples, the PicoScope 3000 series can collect up to one million. Zoom Facilities
Sampling rate vs memory depthAll digital oscilloscopes store data in a waveform buffer. At high sampling rates this buffer memory is quickly filled, the only way the oscilloscope can collect data for long periods of time is by turning down the sampling rate. The net effect is that an oscilloscope with a high sampling rate and small buffer memory (say 1 GS/s and 2500 samples) can only collect at the quoted sampling rate for the top few timebases. For example, at a timebase of 500 µs/div, due to the 2500 sample buffer the 1 GS/s scope will be sampling at 500 KS/s whilst the PicoScope 3206 with its 1 million sample memory will still be sampling at 200 MS/s. The "1 GS/s" oscilloscope is sampling 400 times slower than the 200 MS/s oscilloscope. In this example, the PicoScope 3206 will sample faster than the 1 GS/s oscilloscope at all timebases longer than 1 µs/div, above this it is limited to 200 MS/s for single shot signals. For repetitive signals however you can use the ETS (equivalent time sampling) mode to boost the sampling rate to a staggering 10 GS/s. In conclusion maximum sampling rate and memory depth are closely related and both must be considered when purchasing an oscilloscope. Oversampling and noise reductionWhen viewing noisy signals, the combination of a high sampling rate and large buffer memory can be used to oversample by sampling at a faster rate and recording more data that would normally be required to display a waveform. Using the PicoScope oscilloscope software this excess data can then be filtered to increase the resolution of the signal and remove random high frequency noise. Oversampling can also be used with the spectrum analyser, by effectively increasing the resolution of the acquired data, the spectrum analyser's dynamic range is increased. The two screenshots show the effects of oversampling. In the oscilloscope view, 500,000 points were collected and then displayed using one of the filtered display modes. The effect is to remove high frequency noise and increase the effective resolution of the signal from 8 to 12 bits. The spectrum view shows the same signal with and without 16x oversampling. The effect of the oversampling is to lower the noise floor revealing hidden harmonics in the measured signals. High speed data acquisitionIn addition to its use as an oscilloscope and spectrum analyser, the PicoScope 3000 series oscilloscopes are also supplied with PicoLog data logging software. This allows full control over the memory use and sampling rate turning the product into a versatile high speed data acquisition device. |
![]() |
|
©2008 IMEX Systems Limited - All rights reserved |