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On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 14:10:32 -0500, Phil Hobbs
wrote: John Larkin wrote: On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 10:08:19 -0800, "RST Engineering" wrote: A hot resistor. How about a thermistor or a lamp filament that was 50 ohms at some high temperature. You could heat it with DC, sense its resistance/temp, and let it make noise, all in a single part. Old vintage noise figure meters used gas tubes. And I think there was a pencil tube that mounted in a waveguide and made shot noise. And, of course, the old photomultiplier trick. I still like the flashlight/photodiode trick. You can get a really good calibration just from the dc, and can calibrate the frequency response with a spark plug. Cheers, Phil Hobbs What's the light-flash waveform look like from a spark plug? What do you drive it with? Don't you have gobs of femtosecond lasers around your place? John |
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