Oscilloscopes
What’s an oscilloscope? Oscilloscopes, also called Digital Storage Oscilloscopes (DSOs) or Mixed Signal Oscilloscopes (MSOs), are a common type of test instrument used to capture, analyze, and troubleshoot electrical or real world physical signals.
Definition of Oscilloscope: Oscilloscopes observe the change of electrical signals over time, continuously graphed on a display as voltage or amplitude vs. time. During observation, oscilloscopes can analyze waveforms parametrically (i.e. frequency, RMS, peak-to-peak amplitude, rise time, etc.) Non-electrical signals, especially mechatronic signals such as vibration, strain, temperature, or current can be converted to voltages and displayed.
More Oscilloscope Information: Yokogawa oscilloscopes deliver a range of bandwidths, up to eight channel plus sixteen logic input oscilloscopes, unparalleled suites of triggers and signal analysis, and a unique ability to save multiple triggered-events to “History” memory.
Product
Mixed Signal Oscilloscopes
Yokogawa mixed signal oscilloscopes.
Simultaneous, time correlated observations.
Analysis of analog with digital (logic) signals.
Troubleshooting electrical anomalies, measuring parametric values, monitoring signals
ScopeCorders
Flexible, high-performance Yokogawa ScopeCorder.
Modular platform combines mixed signal oscilloscope and portable data acquisition recorder.
Captures high-speed transients and low-speed trends