Do you really want me to explain how to make jitter and rise time measurement on a high speed scope?
random thoughts Send a noteboard - 23/09/2011 05:06:46 PM
It really isn't that hard. With modern electronics it isn't hard to make very accurate time measurements. The simple answer is you take a very fast clock and count the number of clock pulses that take place between events. If the clock is say 20GHz it will through 20 pulses in one nanosecond. So you set up the measurement to start when you send the particle and stop when the particle arrive then you look at how many clock pulses took place. You know the speed of light and how far you are sending so if it gets there 5 pulses faster than light would have taken then it happened in one quarter of a nanosecond or 250 picoseconds faster than the speed of light.
What they are doing is much more complicated than that but that is a 3000 foot level view of how you could make the measurement.
What they are doing is much more complicated than that but that is a 3000 foot level view of how you could make the measurement.
Whoa. Einstein's theory of relativity in danger?
22/09/2011 09:39:04 PM
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How do they measure something like that? Billioninths of a second? *NM*
23/09/2011 12:05:44 AM
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Billionths of a second is easy
23/09/2011 02:15:34 PM
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That's nice but you still didn't explain how they do it
*NM*
23/09/2011 02:24:28 PM
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Do you really want me to explain how to make jitter and rise time measurement on a high speed scope?
23/09/2011 05:06:46 PM
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It's really just about finding some natural event that takes place on that timescale
24/09/2011 01:10:13 AM
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You should just post directly to the study.
23/09/2011 01:53:56 PM
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Now all his math teachers in school can gloat "Told you he didn't know what he was talking about."
23/09/2011 10:10:35 PM
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Re:Now all his math teachers in school can gloat "Told you he didn't know what he was talking about"
23/09/2011 10:26:01 PM
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I neglected to say at the time that this is very interesting and potentially revolutionary.
25/09/2011 12:02:01 AM
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