R&S ZNB Series User Manual page 124

Vector network analyzers
Table of Contents

Advertisement

®
R&S
ZNB/ZNBT
From this equation, it is easy to relate the real and imaginary components of the com-
plex admittance to the real and imaginary parts of Γ:
According to the two equations above, the graphical representation in an inverted
Smith chart has the following properties:
Real reflection coefficients are mapped to real admittances (conductances).
The center of the Γ plane (Γ = 0) is mapped to the reference admittance Y
whereas the circle with |Γ| = 1 is mapped to the imaginary axis of the Y plane.
The circles for the points of equal conductance are centered on the real axis and
intersect at Y = infinity. The arcs for the points of equal susceptance also belong to
circles intersecting at Y = infinity (short circuit point (–1, 0)), centered on a straight
vertical line.
Examples for special points in the inverted Smith chart:
The magnitude of the reflection coefficient of a short circuit (Y = infinity, U = 0) is
one, its phase is –180 deg.
The magnitude of the reflection coefficient of an open circuit (Y = 0, I = 0) is one, its
phase is zero.
4.2.3.3
Measured quantities and trace formats
The analyzer allows any combination of a display format and a measured quantity. The
following rules can help to avoid inappropriate formats and find the format that is ide-
ally suited to the measurement task.
All formats are suitable for the analysis of reflection coefficients S
"SWR", "Smith" and "Inv Smith" lose their original meaning (standing wave ratio,
User Manual 1173.9163.02 ─ 62
Concepts and features
Screen elements
,
0
. The formats
ii
124

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents