Eight-Channel Continuous Timer
TBMG-699
5/1/2004
- Content
A custom laboratory electronic timer circuit measures the durations of successive cycles of nominally highly stable input clock signals in as many as eight channels, for the purpose of statistically quantifying the small instabilities of these signals. The measurement data generated by this timer are sent to a personal computer running software that integrates the measurements to form a phase residual for each channel and uses the phase residuals to compute Allan variances for each channel. (The Allan variance is a standard statistical measure of instability of a clock signal.) Like other laboratory clock-cycle-measuring circuits, this timer utilizes an externally generated reference clock signal having a known frequency (100 MHz) much higher than the frequencies of the input clock signals (between 100 and 120 Hz). It counts the number of reference- clock cycles that occur between successive rising edges of each input clock signal of interest, thereby affording a measurement of the input clocksignal period to within the duration (10 ns) of one reference clock cycle. Unlike typical prior laboratory clockcycle- measuring circuits, this timer does not skip some cycles of the input clock signals. The non-cycle-skipping feature is an important advantage because in applications that involve integration of measurements over long times for characterizing nominally highly stable clock signals, skipping cycles can degrade accuracy.
- Citation
- "Eight-Channel Continuous Timer," Mobility Engineering, May 1, 2004.