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4 - Phase noise and feedback theory

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 January 2011

Enrico Rubiola
Affiliation:
FEMTO-ST Instititute, Université de Franche Comté, Besançon
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Summary

The main purpose of this chapter is to prove and generalize the Leeson formula (3.19), which was obtained with heuristic reasoning in Chapter 3. This extension in our knowledge suggests new simulation and experimental techniques and enables the analysis of other cases of interest not considered in the current literature, such as mode degeneracy or quasi-degeneracy in resonators or in an oscillator pulled off the resonant frequency. The analysis of delay-line oscillators and lasers in Chapter 5 is based on the ideas introduced here.

Before tackling this proof, however, we must build up a set of tools to manipulate the oscillator phase noise using Laplace transforms and the general formalism of linear time-invariant systems. The underlying idea is to represent the oscillator as a noise-free system that accepts a phase noise Ψ(s) at the input and delivers a phase noise Φ(s) at the output, as shown in Fig. 4.1. In this way the oscillator may be described by its phasenoise transfer function. The input noise, of course, is the noise of the oscillator's internal parts. The use of a Laplace transform to analyze the phase fluctuation of a sinusoidal signal is inspired by the field of phase-locked loops (PLLs), where it is a common way of calculating the transient response. However, this powerful approach constitutes a new departure in the noise analysis of oscillators.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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