B
Bill Sloman
Guest
On 29/09/2014 2:04 AM, John Larkin wrote:
It's done in Rubidium and Caesium atomic clocks. The very precise
microwave frequency that messes with the hyperfine transitions would be
smeared out in frequency if edges weren't periodic to picoseconds.
Comforting.
--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
On Sun, 28 Sep 2014 08:07:38 +0100, "Kevin Aylward"
ExtractkevinRemove@kevinaylward.co.uk> wrote:
"John Larkin" wrote in message
news:4qie2alha115etc597v39e52nvrtnvav0t@4ax.com...
Consider this:
If we square up the 10 MHz reference, and the 155.52 MHz oscillator
were somehow locked to it, the edges line up at 80 KHz, namely every
12.5 us. So the bangbang phase detector only delivers one bit of
information (namely early/late) 80K times per second. That may be too
noisy to discipline a cheap 155 MHz VCXO.
Why not just use a non-cheap 155.52 MHz VCXO?
There aren't all that many 155.52's around.
Correct, but there are wades of exact 38.88 MHz and 19.44 MHz XTAL VCXOs
about. I know, my current OSC ASIC uses them
There are also x4 multiplier chips that are designed to solve this
particular 155.52 MHz problem from those frequencies.
This is bog standard. Obtain a 155.52 MHz VCXO from a (tank) multiplied up
from 38.88 MHz or 19.44 MHz VCXO
The X4 multiplier would have to produce edges that are strictly
periodic to picoseconds. Can that be done?
It's done in Rubidium and Caesium atomic clocks. The very precise
microwave frequency that messes with the hyperfine transitions would be
smeared out in frequency if edges weren't periodic to picoseconds.
CTS does make a surfmount 155.52 fundamental VCXO that claims very low
jitter. Samples are coming, I think.
Comforting.
--
Bill Sloman, Sydney