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What’s The Difference Between Real-Time And Sampling Oscilloscopes?

April 10, 2013
The path to digitalization for both real-time and sampling scopes is essentially the same. The input signal passes through front-end signal conditioning circuitry on the oscilloscope and is digitized, stored to memory, and then displayed on screen. However, the underlying technology for each varies dramatically.  

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Author’s note: Early in my engineering career, I accepted a research project to characterize light transmission behavior through D-type optical fiber while the fibers bathed in an acid bath for multiple hours. I was happy to see a new scope that wasn’t being used and commandeered it for my work. Not having previously written software to control and analyze scope measurements, I immediately went to work on the new oscilloscope. After two weeks of developing test fixtures and writing software, I began to run into unexpected issues while running my first tests. New to this type of work, I asked for assistance from an experienced engineer. “Why in the world are you using a sampling scope for this experiment?” he asked. The question caught me by surprise. I began wondering what the difference was between a sampling scope and a real-time scope, what applications each one serves, and where they overlap.

Real-time oscilloscopes are now commonly called digital storage oscilloscopes (DSOs) or mixed-signal oscilloscopes (MSOs). Most oscilloscopes sold today are real-time scopes. Real-time scopes come in bandwidths that range from a few megahertz to tens of gigahertz, and they can be purchased for as little as a few hundred dollars or as much as a few hundred thousand dollars.

Sampling scopes, commonly known as digital communication analyzers (DCAs), typically start in bandwidths of tens of gigahertz and are used primarily for analyzing high-speed serial buses, optical devices, and clock signals. As bandwidths continue to increase, however, sampling scopes and real-time oscilloscopes have begun to overlap in numerous application spaces.

The path to digitalization for both real-time and sampling scopes is essentially the same. The input signal passes through front-end signal conditioning circuitry on the oscilloscope and is digitized, stored to memory, and then displayed on screen. However, the underlying technology for each varies dramatically.

Table Of Contents

• Real-Time Scopes

• Sampling Scopes

• Sampling Vs. Real-Time Oscilloscopes

• Noise And Signal-To-Noise Ratio

• Frequency Response

• When To Use A Sampling Scope Or A Real-Time Scope

• Conclusion

Real-Time Scopes

How do real-time scopes work? Real-time oscilloscopes include trigger ASICs that allow users to specify specific events of interest, such as a rising voltage threshold, a setup and hold violation, or a pattern trigger. In their normal acquisition mode, when the scope trigger circuitry sees this event, the scope will then capture and store contiguous sample points around this trigger point and update the display with the captured data.

Real-time scopes can be run in single-shot mode or in repetitive or run mode. In single-shot mode, the scope acquires and displays a single acquisition of consecutive samples determined by the memory depth and sample rate set on the oscilloscope. The user can pan and zoom to any event of interest in the scope acquisition after the scope captures a single trace. In run mode, the scope continues to acquire and display each condition that matches the scope’s trigger specification. Variable or infinite persistence enables successive signal captures to be overlaid on the original signal. Repetitive mode is commonly used since it provides a live view of the device under test (DUT). Measurements like rise time or pulse width and analysis such as math or fast Fourier transforms (FFTs) can be performed in either single-shot mode or over a period of repetitive acquisitions.

Real-time oscilloscopes are defined by three key banner specifications, namely bandwidth, sample rate, and memory depth. Of course, there are many more important specifications that must be considered when looking at a real-time oscilloscope. Most real-time scopes below 6-GHz bandwidth include both 1-MΩ and 50-MΩ inputs, which enables them to be used with a wider variety of probes and cables not compatible with sampling scopes.

Sampling Scopes

Sampling scopes are uniquely designed to capture, display, and analyze repetitive signals. Triggering capabilities are likewise crafted for repetitive signals. A sampling scope will capture a set of non-contiguous samples spaced in time when it sees its first trigger condition. The scope delays the trigger point, captures the next set of points, and places them on its display with the first set of points. It repeats this process, building up the waveform in an infinite-persistent mode over successive acquisitions.

A key technology component, the trigger interpolation, controls the time resolution between triggers for measurement precision. Memory depth is not a critical specification or needed as only a few points are captured and processed on each trigger. Likewise, sample rate also isn’t critical. Rather, precision in the amount of time from the first trigger condition to a next trigger condition delayed slightly from the first is critical.

Sampling Vs. Real-Time Oscilloscopes

As mentioned previously, the bandwidths of real-time oscilloscopes now exceed 60 GHz, where the sampling oscilloscopes now reach greater than 90 GHz. As a result, for most digital applications, bandwidths are no longer the easy criteria to use for deciding which is the correct oscilloscope to choose. That being said, price remains a key difference. A fully loaded sampling oscilloscope at 50 GHz will cost less than $150,000 USD, where a real-time oscilloscope approaches $400,000 USD. Designers must choose whether the increased flexibility of a real-time oscilloscope is worth the increased cost.

Noise And Signal-to-Noise Ratio

There are a lot more differences between a sampling scope and a real-time oscilloscope. A sampling oscilloscope has a 14-bit analog-to-digital converter (ADC). Consequently, it has a very large dynamic range, which enables it to look at signals ranging from a few millivolts to a full volt without the need of attenuation. The sampling scope, then, maintains very low noise at different volts per division settings. The real-time oscilloscope is limited in its dynamic range to 8 bits, but typically will show an effective bit number of around 6 bits.

As a result of the limited signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), it must use attenuators to correctly display signals from a few millivolts to several volts. Ultimately, this means that a real-time oscilloscope will have higher noise than a sampling oscilloscope. The low noise of the sampling oscilloscope has led it to be considered the “gold standard” of measurements, but real-time oscilloscopes continue to improve and have begun to narrow the signal integrity gap.

1. Sampling scopes, like real-time scopes, offer eye diagrams, histograms, and jitter measurements. With high bandwidths, modularity, and lower pricing, they typically fit manufacturing environments better than real-time scopes.

Frequency Response

Another consideration when choosing between a real-time oscilloscope and a sampling oscilloscope is their frequency response. A sampling oscilloscope typically won’t use digital signal processing (DSP) correction, so it has a frequency response that rolls off slowly (its hardware response) and looks more Gaussian in shape. A real-time oscilloscope can implement DSP and thus can correct for its frequency response. For instance, Agilent’s DSOX93304Q uses a flat frequency response through its entire passband, which means that its gain will not vary by more than 1 dB in the entire frequency of the scope.

Frequency responses on real-time oscilloscopes can vary. Some oscilloscope vendors have up to five responses that all have different characteristics. During side-by-side comparisons, the flat response and the Gaussian response make two measurements look tremendously different. For instance, a Gaussian roll-off can influence a measurement and add intersymbol interference. A flat response that rolls off quickly can exhibit what looks like ringing in its response if a signal is fast enough to drive past the oscilloscope’s bandwidth. In either case, one must understand how the hardware can influence measurements.

Clock Recovery Differences

Clock recovery is a key component of oscilloscope measurements. Recovering clocks allows for building of a real-time eye, mask testing, and jitter separation. Essentially a recovered clock is a reference clock used for measurement comparisons. Until recently, sampling oscilloscopes relied entirely on hardware to recover a clock. As a result, whether the clock was an explicit clock or an internal 10-MHz clock provided by the sampling scope itself, the recovery system was prone to error.

This is no longer the case. For example, the Agilent sampling scope now can provide a software-based clock recovery system, which is ideal for making accurate clock recoveries. The real-time oscilloscopes almost always will use a software clock recovery. However, it does have the added feature of using explicit clocking. Again, the advantage of a software clock recovery is that it is not prone to the hardware errors, but will land its edges where they need to be regardless of data rate.

In addition to the difference between a hardware clock recovery and a software clock recovery, one must pay attention to the clock recovery algorithm that is being used. Sampling scopes typically will use a jitter transfer function (JTF), where real-time oscilloscopes will use an observed JTF (OJTF). The OJTF will cut off more low-frequency jitter than a JTF. As a result, you could see significantly lower jitter numbers on the real-time scope than the sampling scope. Thanks to recent advances in sampling scopes, users can reset the numbers simply by changing both scopes to the same transfer function, making jitter comparisons significantly easier.

When To Use A Sampling Scope Or A Real-Time Scope

Historically, sampling scopes have had an order-of-magnitude advantage over real-time scopes in maximum bandwidth and intrinsic jitter. Yet over the last decade, real-time scopes have narrowed the gap tremendously, providing users involved with transceiver testing a choice on whether to go with a real-time scope or a sampling scope. The sampling scope still has lower jitter and a much higher dynamic range, though, making it ideal for characterization in a controlled environment. Assuming that your signal is repeatable or can be captured with a real-time eye, the sampling scope will provide a true depiction of your signal.

Flexibility makes real-time scopes appealing. If the user is debugging and wants to trigger on difficult to find events, the real-time scope is ideal. Real-time scope users can choose from a myriad of compliance, protocol triggering and decode, and analysis applications. The real-time scope also can measure jitter on single acquisitions, making it very good for analyzing root causes of failures. Most methods of implementations in standards use real-time scopes for transmitter testing as well, which means users may need to use a real-time scope to ensure that their devices are “compliant.”

2. Real-time scopes now offer bandwidth up to 63 GHz and advanced jitter analysis applications, blurring the line between real-time and sampling for research and development usage.

Conclusion

For most scope applications, real-time scopes provide a great fit. They come in a variety of bandwidths, include the ability to capture single-shot events as well as repetitive signals, and have narrowed the gap for high-frequency measurements such as jitter and transmitter characterization.

If your application includes a repetitive waveform that requires lower jitter and a higher dynamic range, a sampling scope is a good choice. Sampling scopes also have the advantage of a lower initial cost and modular upgrades, making them well suited for electrical and optical manufacturing test applications.

If you’re working at frequencies greater than 20 GHz and are unsure of which type of scope to choose, engage with a scope vendor that carries both sampling and real-time scopes. The vendor will have a mutual interest of ensuring that the scope you choose matches your needs, unlike a vendor that only carries real-time scopes or has a limited offering of sampling scopes.

Joel Woodward is the senior product manager, oscilloscopes, in the Oscilloscope Products Division, Electronic Measurement Group, at Agilent Technologies. He joined Agilent Technologies (formerly Hewlett-Packard) in 1989 as a technical support engineer working with oscilloscopes and logic analyzers. During his 24 years with the company, his career has focused on bringing new and innovative system verification and validation solutions to research and development engineers in the electronics industry. Within Agilent’s electronic design automation and test and measurement businesses, he has held several individual contributor and management positions. Instrumental in the creation of three startup businesses within Agilent, he holds a patent in FPGA debug. He also holds a degree in electronic engineering from Brigham Young University and an MBA from Regis University, and he has completed coursework from Harvard Business School.

About the Author

Joel Woodward | Oscilloscope Product Planner

Joel Woodward is strategic planner for oscilloscopes at Rohde & Schwarz. He has worked in the test and measurement industry for 27 years. Joel holds a degree in electrical and computer engineering from Brigham Young University, an MBA from Regis University, has completed course work at the Harvard Business School, and holds an FPGA debug patent. His outside interests include digital photography and hiking in national parks.

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