Technical data
12
Obtaining Absolute Power Measurements on Associated Measuring Instruments
Measurements that Requires Real-Time Synchronization (Trigger)
Some data bus cabling, such as USB or GPIB, allows a certain degree of 
measurement synchronization (in the millisecond range). However, in many 
measurement environments, real-time triggering is a necessity. These will call 
for trigger synchronization in the microsecond region. The following sections 
provide several suggested applications:
•  If more than one U2000 Series is used in a system monitoring application, 
all the sensors are to monitor the power signal with complex modulation. 
There may be a need to synchronize the data sampling to coincide with the 
  communications clock. In this application, a common video trigger pulse will 
be used to connect to all the real-time trigger inputs of the multiple sensors. 
Typical communications formats are the GSM (pulsed) signals.
•  The triggering port can also be used to synchronize the measurements with 
an external instrument or event, for instance, the calibration of the output 
power of a synthesizer that is sweeping in frequency. The triggering port 
can be used to accept a trigger signal from the synthesizer to initiate the 
  measurement with every frequency step.
Many modern test instruments have powerful signal processing and displays of 
a variety of important parameters. Spectrum analyzers provide many different 
signal characteristics versus frequency, including nominal power levels of 
unknown signals. Network analyzers, with their multi-band signal sources are 
great for measuring S-parameters of all sorts of passive and active components. 
Digital signal analyzers also characterize the digital formats of common 
communications signals.
However, none of these instruments, in spite of their on-board computers and 
analysis, can obtain an absolute power measurement of the signal under test. 
The U2000 Series can be included in those measurement setups and feed 
absolute power measurement data directly to the main measurement instrument 
on-board processor.
Alternatively, the U2000 Series can be used to assure the output power 
specifi cations of the transceiver, without needing an extra power meter. This can 
be applied to a signal generator that is used to stimulate a sub-system under 
test, for example, a transceiver within the microwave frequency range.










