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Journal ArticleDOI

Statistics of atomic frequency standards

TLDR
In this paper, a theoretical analysis of the relationship between the expectation value of the standard deviation of the frequency fluctuations for any finite number of data samples and the infinite time average value of a standard deviation is presented.
Abstract
A theoretical development is presented which results in a relationship between the expectation value of the standard deviation of the frequency fluctuations for any finite number of data samples and the infinite time average value of the standard deviation, which provides an invariant measure of an important quality factor of a frequency standard. A practical and straightforward method of determining the power spectral density of the frequency fluctuations from the variance of the frequency fluctuations, the sampling time, the number of samples taken, and the dependence on system bandwidth is also developed. Additional insight is also given into some of the problems that arise from the presence of "flicker noise" (spectrum proportional to |ω|-1) modulation of the frequency of an oscillator. The theory is applied in classifying the types of noise on the signals of frequency standards made available at NBS, Boulder Laboratories, such as: masers (both H and N15H 3 ), the cesium beam frequency standard employed as the U. S. Frequency Standard, and rubidium gas cells. "Flicker noise" frequency modulation was not observed on the signals of masers for sampling times ranging from 0.1 second to 4 hours. In a comparison between the NBS hydrogen maser and the NBS III cesium beam, uncorrelated random noise was observed on the frequency fluctuations for sampling times extending to 4 hours; the fractional standard deviations of the frequency fluctuations were as low as 5 parts in 1014.

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Book

Practical RF system design

TL;DR: This chapter discusses the design process for overcoming the challenge of nonlinear noise in the Cascade process, and some examples of this work can be found in the Appendixes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimation of velocity uncertainties from GPS time series: Examples from the analysis of the South African TrigNet network

TL;DR: In this article, the velocity uncertainties from GPS position time series that are affected by time-correlated noise are derived based on the Allan variance, which is widely used in the estimation of oscillator stability and requires neither spectral analysis nor maximum likelihood estimation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multifractal fluctuations in seismic interspike series

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the interspike intervals (times between successive earthquakes) of one of the most seismically active areas of central Italy by using the Multifractal Detrended Fluctuation Analysis (MF-DFA).
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of temperature and wind statistics in contrasting environments among different sonic anemometer–thermometers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared measurements from eight different model SATs: (i) mean temperature in an acoustically isolated chamber, (ii) mean vertical wind speed ( w s ¯ ) in a low-speed wind tunnel, and (iii) wind statistics with data collected over a research field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bias Prediction for MEMS Gyroscopes

TL;DR: The results show that it is necessary to model fractional noise in order to consistently predict the bias of a modern MEMS gyro, but the complexity of the Kalman filter approach makes other methods, such as the moving averages, appealing.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An Introduction to Fourier Analysis and Generalized Functions.

TL;DR: The theory of generalised functions and their Fourier transforms is discussed in this paper. But the analysis of Fourier transform is limited to the case of generalized functions, and it is not suitable for generalised function analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Some aspects of the theory and measurement of frequency fluctuations in frequency standards

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of finite observation time on the frequency and phase stability of a servo-controlled oscillator with respect to a given quartz oscillator and an atomic reference are analyzed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Atomic timekeeping and the statistics of precision signal generators

TL;DR: In this paper, a detailed analysis of the calibration procedure showed that the third finite difference of the phase is closely related to the clock errors and that quartz crystal oscillators exhibit a "flicker" or |ω|-1type of noise modulating the frequency of the oscillator.

Atomic timekeeping and the statistics of precision signal generators

TL;DR: The method of finite differences of the phase is shown to be a powerful means of classifying the statistical fluctuations of thephase and frequency for signal generators in general and by employing finite differences it is possible to avoid divergences normally associated with flicker noise spectra.
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