98
Glossary
AC/DC Control
Each channel can be set to either AC coupling or DC coupling. With DC coupling, the
voltage displayed onscreen is equal to the true voltage of the signal with respect to
ground. With AC coupling, any DC component of the signal is filtered out, leaving only
the variations in the signal for the AC component.
Aliasing
When the signal frequency gets higher than half the scope
’s maximum sampling rate
and exceeds the limit, a distorted waveform appears. This distortion is called aliasing.
Analog Bandwidth
All oscilloscopes have an upper limit to the range of frequencies at which they can
measure accurately. The analog bandwidth of an oscilloscope is defined as the
frequency at which a displayed sine wave has half the power of the input sine wave
(about 71% of the amplitude).
Block Mode
A sampling mode in which the computer prompts the oscilloscope to collect a block of
data into its internal memory before stopping the oscilloscope and transferring the
whole block into computer memory. This mode of operation is effective when the input
signal being sampled is high frequency.
Buffer Size/Cache Size
This term indicates the size of the oscilloscope
’s buffer memory. The buffer memory is
used by the oscilloscope to temporarily store data. This helps to compensate for the
differences in data transfer rate from one device to another.
Sampling Rate
This term is used to define the number of samples per second captured by the
oscilloscope. The faster the sampling rate of the scope, the more frequently it
measures the signal voltage, and so the more detailed will be the trace that appears on
the scope screen.