The Oscilloscope
A - Z : Glossary of terms
- AC
- (Alternating Current) A signal in which the current and voltage vary
in a repeating pattern over time.
ADC
- (Analog-to-Digital Converter) A digital electronic component that converts
an electrical signal into discrete binary values.
Alternate Mode
- A display mode of operation in which the oscilloscope completes tracing
one channel before beginning to trace another channel.
Amplitude
- The magnitude of a quantity or strength of a signal. In electronics,
amplitude usually refers to either voltage or power.
Attenuation
- A decrease in signal voltage during its transmission from one point
to another.
Averaging
- A processing technique used by digital oscilloscopes to eliminate noise
in a signal.
Bandwidth
- A frequency range.
CRT
- (Cathode-Ray Tube) An electron-beam tube in which the beam can be focused
on a luminescent screen and varied in both position and intensity to produce
a visible pattern. A television picture tube is a CRT.
Chop Mode
- A display mode of operation in which small parts of each channel are
traced so that more than one waveform can appear on the screen simultaneously.
Circuit Loading
- The unintentional interaction of the probe and oscilloscope with the
circuit being tested, distorting the signal.
Compensation
- A probe adjustment for 10X probes that balances the capacitance of
the probe with the capacitance of the oscilloscope.
Coupling
- The method of connecting two circuits together. Circuits connected
with a wire are directly coupled; circuits connected through a capacitor
or a transformer are indirectly (or AC) coupled.
Cursor
- An on-screen marker that you can align with a waveform to take accurate
measurements.
DC (Direct Current)
- A signal with a constant voltage and current.
Division
- Measurement markings on the CRT graticule of the oscilloscope.
Earth Ground
- A conductor that will dissipate large electrical currents into the
Earth.
Envelope
- The outline of a signal's highest and lowest points acquired over many
repetitions.
Equivalent-time Sampling
- A sampling mode in which the oscilloscope constructs a picture of a
repetitive signal by capturing a little bit of information from each repetition.
Focus
- The oscilloscope control that adjusts the CRT electron beams to control
the sharpness of the display.
- Frequency
- The number of times a signal repeats in one second, measured in Hertz
(cycles per second). The frequency equals 1/period.
Gigahertz (GHz)
- 1,000,000,000 Hertz; a unit of frequency.
Glitch
- An intermittent error in a circuit.
Graticule
- The grid lines on a screen for measuring oscilloscope traces.
Ground
- A conducting connection by which an electric circuit or equipment is
connected to the earth to establish and maintain a reference voltage level.
- The voltage reference point in a circuit.
Hertz (Hz)
- One cycle per second; the unit of frequency.
Kilohertz (kHz)
- 1000 Hertz; a unit of frequency.
Interpolation
- A "connect-the-dots" processing technique to estimate what
a fast waveform looks like based on only a few sampled points.
Megahertz (MHz)
- 1,000,000 Hertz; a unit of frequency.
Megasamples per second (MS/s)
- A sample rate unit equal to one million samples per second.
Microsecond
- A unit of time equivalent to 0.000001 seconds.
Millisecond (ms)
- A unit of time equivalent to 0.001 seconds.
Nanosecond (ns)
- A unit of time equivalent to 0.000000001 seconds.
Noise
- An unwanted voltage or current in an electrical circuit.
Oscilloscope
- An instrument used to make voltage changes visible over time. The word
oscilloscope comes from "oscillate," since oscilloscopes are
often used to measure oscillating voltages.
Peak - V[p]
- The maximum voltage level measured from a zero reference point.
Peak-to-peak - V[p-p]
- The voltage measured from the maximum point of a signal to its minimum
point, usually twice the V[p] level.
Peak Detection
- An acquisition mode for digital oscilloscopes that lets you see the
extremes of a signal.
Period
- The amount of time it takes a wave to complete one cycle. The period
equals 1/frequency.
Phase
- The amount of time that passes from the beginning of a cycle to the
beginning of the next cycle, measured in degrees.
Probe
- An oscilloscope input device, usually having a pointed metal tip for
making electrical contact with a circuit element and a flexible cable for
transmitting the signal to the oscilloscope.
Pulse
- A common waveform shape that has a fast rising edge, a width, and a
fast falling edge.
RMS
- Root mean square.
Real-time Sampling
- A sampling mode in which the oscilloscope collects as many samples
as it can as the signal occurs.
Record Length
- The number of waveform points used to create a record of a signal.
Rise Time
- The time taken for the leading edge of a pulse to rise from its minimum
to its maximum values (typically measured from 10% to 90% of these values).
Sample Point
- The raw data from an ADC used to calculate waveform points.
Screen
- The surface of the CRT upon which the visible pattern is produced -
the display area.
Signal Generator
- A test device for injecting a signal into a circuit input; the circuit's
output is then read by an oscilloscope.
Sine Wave
- A common curved wave shape that is mathematically defined.
Single Shot
- A signal measured by an oscilloscope that only occurs once (also called
a transient event).
Single Sweep
- A trigger mode for displaying one screenful of a signal and then stopping.
Slope
- On a graph or an oscilloscope screen, the ratio of a vertical distance
to a horizontal distance. A positive slope increases from left to right,
while a negative slope decreases from left to right.
Square Wave
- A common wave shape consisting of repeating square pulses.
Sweep
- One horizontal pass of an oscilloscope's electron beam from left to
right across the CRT screen.
Sweep Speed
- Same as the time base.
Time Base
- Oscilloscope circuitry that controls the timing of the sweep. The time
base is set by the seconds/division control.
Trace
- The visible shapes drawn on a CRT by the movement of the electron beam.
Transducer
- A device that converts a specific physical quantity such as sound,
pressure, strain, or light intensity into an electrical signal.
Transient
- A signal measured by an oscilloscope that only occurs once (also called
a single-shot event).
Trigger
- The circuit that initiates a horizontal sweep on an oscilloscope and
determines the beginning point of the waveform.
Trigger Holdoff
- A control that inhibits the trigger circuit from looking for a trigger
level for some specified time after the end of the waveform.
Trigger Level
- The voltage level that a trigger source signal must reach before the
trigger circuit initiates a sweep.
Volt
- The unit of electric potential difference.
Voltage
- The difference in electric potential, expressed in volts, between two
points.
Waveform
- A graphic representation of a voltage varying over time.
Waveform Point
- A digital value that represents the voltage of a signal at a specific
point in time. Waveform points are calculated from sample points and stored
in memory.
Z-axis
- The signal in an oscilloscope that controls electron-beam brightness
as the trace is formed.
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Copyright © 1997-8 Jigar C Shah