For battery-powered circuits, it is easy to build an ultralow-current crystal oscillator designed around a 32.768-kHz crystal. This crystal is common for real-time-clock circuits. Because these ...
http://www.cardinalxtal.comThe term “frequency jitter” has become popular in the last few years to define the short-term stability of a frequency source. A ...
At 40.0MHz the phase noise performance of IQD’s CFPS-115 crystal clock oscillator is -80dBc/Hz at 10Hz offset and -145dBc/Hz at 1kHz offset. Low power consumption is specified at 7mA. The device is ...
Crystal oscillators are incredibly useful components, but they come with one little snag: their oscillation is temperature-dependent. For many applications the relatively small deviation is not a ...
Said to consume 10 times less power than comparable circuits, the EM7604 CMOS crystal oscillator is intended for use with a 32.768 kHz tuning fork crystal as a low-frequency clock oscillator with no ...
Offered as replacements for more costly voltage-controlled oscillator (VCXO) modules, these three new crystal oscillator clock chips operate from a 3.3V power supply and span a 10 MHz to 40 MHz ...
Starting a crystal oscillator fast in an IoT node is an art: the high Q needed for stability means they take milliseconds to get going, just to transmit a 128μs Bluetooth LE packet, and power is at a ...
To ensure the authenticity of the Galileo navigation messages, the Open Service navigation message authentication (OSNMA) mechanism requires a loose synchronization between the receiver clock and the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results