David Lee
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Posts: 29
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For an oscillator to exhibit 1/f^4 phase noise, the oscillator's natural (free-running) frequency needs to be a random walk process, which has increasing variance. Basically, the natural frequency is wandering significantly over time. In a quartz oscillator, the natural frequency is determined by a mechanical vibrating reference, that is known to be sensitive to long-term dimensional changes and mechanical stress caused by the oscillator's environment. Ref. 36 in "The Science of Timekeeping" and others often cite environmental factors such as mechanical shock, vibration and temperature as the cause for 1/f^4 noise. Let's suppose the oscillator's environment (such as temperature) is regulated by another oscillator over a longer time scale. This will cause the natural frequency to drift in a random walk fashion, thus giving rise to 1/f^4 noise. Quartz and atomic clocks are well-known to exhibit 1/f^4 noise, and so I won't be surprised if folks in physics know the various pathways to 1/f^4 noise. Having said all that, I don't think one should worry about 1/f^4 noise that is very close to the carrier, unless designing applications for GPS, satellite comm, .., where maintaining precise timing over a long time interval (long-term time/frequency stability) is needed.
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