Spectrum Analyzer :Introduction,types of spectrum analyzers, Application


           Spectrum Analyzer :
Introduction:-
A spectrum analyzer provides a calibrated graphical display on its CRT, 
with frequency on the horizontal axis and amplitude (voltage) on
 the vertical axis.






(The most common way of observing signals is to display them on an oscilloscope with time as the
X-axis (i.e.between amplitude of the signal and time). This is the time domain. It is also useful to display signals in the frequency domain. The providing this frequency domain view is the spectrum analyzer.)



Displayed as vertical lines against these coordinates are sinusoidal components of which the
input signal is composed. The height represents the absolute magnitude, and the horizontal
location represents the frequency.
These instruments provide a display of the frequency spectrum a given frequency band.
Spectrum analyzers use either parallel filter bank or a swept frequency technique.
In a parallel filter in a parallel filter bank analyzer, The frequency range is covered by a series of
filters whose central frequencies and bandwidth are so selected that they overlap each others, as
shown in fig
fig.





Typically, an audio analyzer has 32 of these filters, each covering one third of an octave.
For wide band narrow resolution analysis, particularly at RF or microwave signals, the swept
Technique is preferred.


                                                   


As per reference  to the block diagram of fig.,

 The saw tooth generator provides the saw tooth voltage ,which drives the horizontal axis
 element of the scope and this saw tooth voltage is the frequency controlled element of
 the voltage tuned oscillator.
 As the oscillator sweeps from fmin to fmax of its frequency band at a linear recurring rate,
 it beats with the frequency component of  the input signal and produce an IF, whenever
 a frequency component is met during its sweep.

The frequency component and voltage tuned oscillator frequency beats together to produce a
difference frequency, i.e. The IF corresponding to the component is amplified and detected if
necessary and then applied to the vertical plates of the CRO, producing a display between of amplitude and  frequency.


The spectrum produced if the input wave is a single toned A.M .
One of the principal applications of spectrum analyzers has been in the study of the
 RF spectrum produced in microwave instruments.

 In a microwave instrument, the horizontal axis can display
as a wide a range as 2 - 3 GHz for a broad survey and as narrow as 30 kHz, for a highly
magnified view of any small portion of the spectrum. Signals at microwave frequency 
separated by only a few KHz can be seen individually.
The frequency range covered by this instrument is from I MHz to 40 GHz, 
The basic block diagram is of a spectrum analyzer covering the range 500 kHz to 1 GHz, 
which is representative of a super heterodyne type
The input signal is fed into a mixer which is driven by a local oscillator. This oscillator is
linearly tunable electrically over the range 2 - 3 GHz. 

The mixer provides two signals at its output that are proportional in amplitude to the
 input signal but of frequencies which are the sum and difference of the input signal 
and local oscillator frequency.


The IF amplifier is tuned to a narrow band around 2 GH4 since the local oscillator is 
tuned over the range of 2 - 3 GHz, only inputs that are separated from the local oscillator 
frequency by 2GHz will be converted to IF frequency band, pass through the IF frequency 
amplifier, get rectified and produce a vertical deflection on the CRT.

From this, it is observed that as the saw tooth signal sweeps, the local oscillator 
also sweeps linearly from 2 - 3 GHz. The tuning of the spectrum analyzer is a
 swept receiver, which sweeps linearly from 0 to 1 GHz. 

The saw tooth scanning signal is also applied to the horizontal plates of
the CRT to form the frequency axis. (The spectrum analyzer is also sensitive to
 signals from 4 - 5 GHz referred to as the image frequency of the super heterodyne. 
A low pass filter with a cutoff frequency above I GHz at the input suppresses
 these spurious signals.)

The two types of spectrum analyzers are,

1. Fliter Bank Spectrum analyzer.
2. Super hetero dyne Spectrum analyzer.
1. Filter Bank Spectrum analyzer

















2. Super hetero dyne Spectrum analyzer

The modern spectrum analyzers use a narrow band super heterodyne receiver. 
Super heterodyne is nothing but mixing of frequencies in the super above
 audio range. 
The functional block diagram of super heterodyne spectrum analyzer or RF 
spectrum analyzer as shown in the Figure 
                            

The RF input to be analyzed is applied to the input attenuator. After attenuating,
 the signal is fed to low pass filter.
The low pass filter suppresses high frequency components and allows low frequency
 components to pass through it. The output of the low pass filter is given to the mixer,
 where this signal is fixed with the signal coming from voltage controlled or 
voltage tuned oscillator. 

This oscillator is tuned over 2 to 3 GHz range. The output of the mixer includes 
two signals whose amplitudes.are proportional to the input signal but their frequencies 
are the sum and  difference of the input signal and the frequency of the local oscillator. 

Since the frequency range of the oscillator is tuned over 2 to 3 GHz, the IF amplifier is
 tuned to a narrow band of frequencies of about 2 GHz.
Therefore only those signals which are separated from the oscillator frequency by
 2 GHz are converted to Intermediate Frequency (IF) band. This IF signal is amplified by
 IF amplifier and then rectified by the detector. After completing amplification and rectification the signal is applied to vertical plates of CRO to produce a vertical deflection on the CRT screen. 
Thus,  when the saw tooth signal sweeps, the oscillator also sweeps linearly from minimum to
 maximum frequency range i.e., from 2 to 3 GHz. 

Here the saw tooth signal is applied not only to the oscillator (to tune the oscillator)
 but also to the horizontal plates of the CRO to get the frequencyaxis or
 horizontal deflection on the CRT screen. On the CRT screen the vertical axis is 
calibrated in amplitude and the horizontal axis is calibrated in frequency.
Applications:
These Spectrum analyzers are widely used in the field of,
1. Bio medicals
2. RADARS
3.Oceangraphy

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