Madeline Horn edited begin_table_label_table_Johnson1__.tex  over 8 years ago

Commit id: ae06d1e4836f095cd0df7a24571bc223ad71ccc1

deletions | additions      

       

$f1 = 1000 \textrm{ Hz}$ & $2.09$ & $4.30$ & $23.60$ & $84.62$ & $298$ & $931$ \\   $f1 = 3000 \textrm{ Hz}$ & $1.98$ & $2.22$ & $10.92$ & $66.55$ & $281$ & $916$ \\   \end{tabular}   \caption{J-Noise Trial 1: Measured Noise from $10 \textrm{k}\Omega$ resistor, in units of Volts} $Volts^$}  \end{table}  \textbf{NOTE: I have partially corrected the formatting of this table to reflect proper AJP style. Please complete the reformatting. You can either put the units in each data entry or at the top of the table in the table caption, but you need to provide them somewhere, along with an indication of what the units are. For example, if these values are the $V_{\textrm{RMS}}$ values from Eq.~\ref{eq:NyquistPredictionForJohnsonNoise}, you could helpfully write, $V_{\textrm{RMS}}$ in Volts (see Eq.~\ref{eq:NyquistPredictionForJohnsonNoise}). }   \textbf{NOTE 2: Are these values really the Johnson noise (and in what units), or are these values the total measured noise (which includes instrumentation noise from the amplifers, etc in addition to the Johnson noise from the resistors? Also, what are the units? Is this ac voltage? or ac voltage squared? or the V-multimeter, which is the average squared voltage divided by 10? or something else, such as volts squared per Hz? }  \textbf{NOTE 3: do these These  values include the amplification gains, or have you already divided by $G_1$ gains  and$G_2$? Your reader can't tell from what you have written here, so they can't really use the information you have provided to check your calculation or compare their own results. Remember to provide ALL  the information your reader will need.} squarer.