Lecroy
LT342
Verfügbarkeitsstatus: | |
---|---|
Menge: | |
·Digital Storage Oscilloscope
·2 channels, 500 MHz bandwidth
·single shot 500 MS/s, repetitive 25 GS/s, 250 K/channel
·16 M RAM, 3.5" floppy disk, RS-232, GPIB.
The LeCroy LT342 oscilloscope is a graph-displaying device, it draws a graph of an electrical signal.
In most applications, the graph shows how signals change over time:
the vertical (Y) axis represents voltage and the horizontal (X) axis represents time.
The intensity or brightness of the display is sometimes called the Z axis.
The LeCroy LT342 oscilloscope's simple graph can tell you many things about a signal, such as:
the time and voltage values of a signal, the frequency of an oscillating signal,
the moving parts of a circuit represented by the signal, the frequency with
which a particular portion of the signal is occurring relative to, other portions,
whether or not a malfunctioning component is distorting the signal,
how much of a signal is direct current (DC) or alternating current (AC)
and how much of the signal is noise and whether the noise is changing with time.
·Digital Storage Oscilloscope
·2 channels, 500 MHz bandwidth
·single shot 500 MS/s, repetitive 25 GS/s, 250 K/channel
·16 M RAM, 3.5" floppy disk, RS-232, GPIB.
The LeCroy LT342 oscilloscope is a graph-displaying device, it draws a graph of an electrical signal.
In most applications, the graph shows how signals change over time:
the vertical (Y) axis represents voltage and the horizontal (X) axis represents time.
The intensity or brightness of the display is sometimes called the Z axis.
The LeCroy LT342 oscilloscope's simple graph can tell you many things about a signal, such as:
the time and voltage values of a signal, the frequency of an oscillating signal,
the moving parts of a circuit represented by the signal, the frequency with
which a particular portion of the signal is occurring relative to, other portions,
whether or not a malfunctioning component is distorting the signal,
how much of a signal is direct current (DC) or alternating current (AC)
and how much of the signal is noise and whether the noise is changing with time.