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.

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
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