P
Phil Hobbs
Guest
On 9/16/2014 3:19 PM, rickman wrote:
Cheers
Phil Hobbs
--
Dr Philip C D Hobbs
Principal Consultant
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics
160 North State Road #203
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510
hobbs at electrooptical dot net
http://electrooptical.net
On 9/16/2014 2:39 PM, Phil Hobbs wrote:
On 09/16/2014 12:27 PM, rickman wrote:
On 9/16/2014 8:19 AM, Phil Hobbs wrote:
On 9/16/2014 12:31 AM, rickman wrote:
On 9/15/2014 11:08 PM, John Larkin wrote:
On Mon, 15 Sep 2014 22:37:19 -0400, rickman <gnuarm@gmail.com> wrote:
On 9/15/2014 10:33 PM, John Larkin wrote:
On Mon, 15 Sep 2014 22:18:05 -0400, rickman <gnuarm@gmail.com
wrote:
That is RMS, I was quoting peak (max). See above in the text you
quoted...
The RMS jitter is specified as 200 fs typ, and the RMS jitter is
specified as 1 ps RMS max.
Ok, so just the two FFs in your circuit create 1.4 ps of jitter RMS
"max" then, no?
No. They are inside the PLL feedback loop.
You might consider moving over to the "basics" newsgroup. It gets
timesome explaining this simple of stuff to newbies.
I know, it is hard to explain something you don't understand.
How can a very slow PLL reduce the cycle to cycle jitter of the PD?
The jitter has some (very wide) intrinsic frequency spectrum, which
will
get folded (aliased) a zillion times into the fundamental interval, and
will therefore be very nearly white, apart from possible power supply
problems.
The loop bandwidth will probably be only a few hundred hertz, because
you have to filter out the gross ugly ripple from the bang-bang PD
without making the loop unstable. Say 200 clocks at 80 kHz.
Most of the DFF's jitter will thus get filtered out.
That isn't the question. He is looking to make a PD with 1 ps jitter.
He is using two FFs with RMS jitter of 1 ps each yielding 1.4 ps of RMA
jitter. How does the filter change this spec?
You're not thinking very hard, or have forgotten how to go from time to
frequency and back.
Jitter is proportional to phase noise in radians for small excursions
White phase noise -> RMS phase error proportional to sqrt(BW)
BW is 0.5% of rep rate -> sqrt(BW) = 7% of full interval -> max RMS
jitter is ~ 7% of 1.4 ps ~= 0.1 ps.
That isn't the PD. He said he wanted a PD with 1 ps of jitter. He has
a PD with 1.4 ps of jitter... I'm just sayin'
Way to move the goal posts, guy. You're just blowing smoke at this point.
Cheers
Phil Hobbs
--
Dr Philip C D Hobbs
Principal Consultant
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics
160 North State Road #203
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510
hobbs at electrooptical dot net
http://electrooptical.net