ali8
Member level 2
The Lock In amplifier uses Phase Sensitive Detection to "lock" to the signal using reference frequency. It is basically auto-correlation. The output of the Lock In amplifier is typically an X signal, the in-phase, and a Y signal, the out-of-phase.
My question: If the Lock In 'locks' to the reference frequency, say 200 Hz, then does this mean the output signal has only this frequency? Experimentally, I find that this is not true, as the output has lots of frequencies, only limited by measurement time and the low pass filter settings of the Lock In.
My question: If the Lock In 'locks' to the reference frequency, say 200 Hz, then does this mean the output signal has only this frequency? Experimentally, I find that this is not true, as the output has lots of frequencies, only limited by measurement time and the low pass filter settings of the Lock In.