About Resolution Bandwidth

Resolution Bandwidth is a qualitative measure of the minimum separation required between two frequency components to be able to visually separate them and, for the VSA, is defined as the Equivalent Noise Bandwidth of the filter, which is determined by the window type that you select and the length of the window.

Resolution bandwidth (ResBW or RBW) affects the following:

ResBW parameter: Specifies the measurement RBW. The VSA will adjust the RBW to the closest value that satisfies the current measurement setup.

Because resolution bandwidth is directly related to measurement time, manually selecting a narrower resolution bandwidth can slow down a measurement more than necessary. Selecting a resolution bandwidth that is too wide, on the other hand, may not provide adequate resolution and can obscure spectral components that are close together.

Swept analyzers generally define ResBW (also called window BW in swept analyzers) as the 3 dB bandwidth of the window. The 89600 VSA defines ResBW as the "equivalent noise bandwidth" of the window, which is the bandwidth of a rectangular filter that passes the same noise power as the filter specified by the window.

It is recommended that Auto Frequency Points mode be enabled. Auto Frequency Points mode provides the most flexibility in choosing a ResBW or Main Time Length for a given Span and Window Type.

Power Spectrum Measurements

For details about Resolution Bandwidth when making Power Spectrum measurements, see Resolution and Video Bandwidth (Power Spectrum).

See Also

Minimum and Maximum ResBW

How ResBW Interacts With Other Parameters

ResBW Tab (MeasSetup)

ResBW Mode

ResBW Coupling

Window Shapefactor and Equivalent Noise BW (Windowing)

     

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