Appendix A: Noise Sources And Cures; Johnson Noise; 1/F' Noise; Noise Spectrum - Stanford Research Systems SR510 Manual

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Appendix A:
Noise Sources and Cures
Noise, random and uncorrelated fluctuations of
electronic signals, finds its way into experiments in
a variety of ways. Good laboratory practice can
reduce noise sources to a manageable level, and
the lock-in technique can be used to recover
signals which may still be buried in noise.
Intrinsic Noise Sources
Johnson Noise. Arising from fluctuations of
electron density in a resistor at finite temperature,
these fluctuations give rise to a mean square
noise voltage,
_
V 2 = ∫4kT Re[Z(f)] df = 4kTR f
where k=Boltzman's constant, 1.38x10- 23 J/°K; T
is the absolute temperature in Kelvin; the real part
of the impedance, Re[z(f)] is the resistance R; and
we are looking at the noise source with a detector,
or ac voltmeter, with a bandwidth of f in Hz. For
a 1M
resistor,
_
(V 2 ) 1/2 = 0.13 V/ Hz
To obtain the rms noise voltage that you would
see across this 1M resistor, we multiply
0.13 V/ Hz by the square root of the detector
bandwidth. If, for example, we were looking at all
frequencies between dc and 1 MHz, we would
expect to see an rms Johnson noise of
_
(V 2 ) 1/2 = 0.13 V/ Hz*(10 6 Hz) 1/2 = 130 V
'1/f Noise'. Arising from resistance fluctuations in
a current carrying resistor, the mean squared
noise voltage due to '1/f' noise is given by
_
V 2 = A R 2 I 2 f/f
where A is a dimensionless constant, 10 -11 for
carbon, R is the resistance, I the current, f the
bandwidth of our detector, and f is the frequency
to which the detector is tuned. For a carbon
resistor carrying 10 mA with R = 1k, f = f = 1Hz,
we have
V noise = 3 Vrms
And Others. Other noise sources include flicker
noise found in vacuum tubes, and generation and
recombination noise found in semiconductors.
All of these noise sources are incoherent. Thus,
the total noise is the square root of the sum of the
squares of all the incoherent noise sources.
Non-Essential Noise Sources
In addition to the "intrinsic" noise sources listed
above there are a variety of "non-essential" noise
sources, i.e. those noise sources which can be
minimized with good laboratory practice. It is
worthwhile to look at what might be a typical noise
spectrum encountered in the laboratory
environment:

Noise Spectrum

Some of the non-essential noise sources appear
in this spectrum as spikes on the intrinsic
background. There are several ways which these
noise sources work their way into an experiment.
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