User Math Menu 4-125
SR785 Dynamic Signal Analyzer
Time/Histogram Measurement Group
Operands are arrays of complex values (real and imaginary). They may be measurement
results (such as FFT(1), Time(1) or Oct(1)), a Trace, or a Constant. An array which is
real simply has zero for its imaginary parts. The array length of an Operand is
determined by the measurement length (number of FFT lines, length of time record,
number of octaves, etc.) or Trace length (length of the data which is stored in the Trace).
Constants assume the length of the user function.
Operands which are measurement results enclosed in angle brackets, such as
<Freq. Resp.> or <Spec(1)>, are exactly the same as the normal measurements. They are
computed using whatever averaging is selected with the <Display Average> softkey.
They are computed from the input data (real time Analog or capture Playback) and use
the frequency and windowing parameters from the menus. Frequency domain
measurements are amplitude calibrated, time records are not. FFT and Time record
measurements are also triggered just like the normal measurements.
Operands which are measurement results which are not enclosed in angle brackets, such
as FFT1 or Time1 represent unaveraged, instantaneous versions of the measurement.
Operands which contain an explicit averaging type, such as Vec<F1> or PeakHold<F2)
always are averaged according to their indicated type, regardless of the setting of the
<Display Average> softkey.
Octave and Swept Sine measurements are always averaged measurements. Use the
[Average] menu to set the averaging parameters.
FFT(1) and FFT(2) are the FFT of the Ch1 and Ch2 inputs. These operands use the
window chosen in the [Window] menu for the display which is measuring the function.
FFTu(1) and FFTu(2) are un-windowed FFT’s of the Ch1 and Ch2 inputs.
Correlation operands such as RMS<Fu1 F1> are used to compte the RMS and Vector
averaged auto and cross correlation measurements. See chapter 2 for a description of
how to compute all the averaged versions of all the predefined measurments.
Trace operands are simply the data stored in the Traces. For example, Traces can hold
reference data used for normalization or calibration. There are 5 Traces which can be
stored. These Traces are shared by all 3 Measurement Groups.
Содержание SR785
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Страница 80: ...1 64 Exceedance Statistics ...
Страница 158: ...2 78 Curve Fitting and Synthesis SR785 Dynamic Signal Analyzer ...
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