DocumentCode
1199836
Title
Canonical Form of Linear Noisy Networks
Author
Haus, H.A. ; Adler, R.B.
Volume
5
Issue
3
fYear
1958
fDate
9/1/1958 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
161
Lastpage
167
Abstract
At any single frequency, every
-terminal-pair noisy linear network has at most n real parameters that are invariant with respect to all lossless "imbeddings" of that network. Such an "imbedding" is defined by constructing an arbitrary lossless
-terminal-pair network,
of whose terminal pairs are connected to those of the original network, and the remaining
of which form a new set of
terminal pairs. Moreover, by a suitable choice of this imbedding structure, the original network can always be reduced to a canonical form which places clearly in evidence its
invariants. The canonical form consists of
isolated one-terminal-pair networks each of which comprises a (negative or positive) resistance in series with a noise voltage generator, and these various noise generators are mutually uncorrelated. The
exchangeable powers from the
isolated terminal pairs are the
invariants of the original network. The invariants have other physical meanings. Each meaning is best brought out by a corresponding particular matrix description of the network. Transformations between matrix descriptions are studied and applied to show that the invariants are interpretable as the
stationary values of the exchangeable power obtainable from any one of the new terminal pairs created by a lossless imbedding, as the imbedding network is varied through all lossless forms. Finally, the two invariants of a two-terminal-pair network are shown to fix the extrema of its noise measure, one of which is known to represent, for an amplifier, the minimum excess noise figure achievable at high gain.
-terminal-pair noisy linear network has at most n real parameters that are invariant with respect to all lossless "imbeddings" of that network. Such an "imbedding" is defined by constructing an arbitrary lossless
-terminal-pair network,
of whose terminal pairs are connected to those of the original network, and the remaining
of which form a new set of
terminal pairs. Moreover, by a suitable choice of this imbedding structure, the original network can always be reduced to a canonical form which places clearly in evidence its
invariants. The canonical form consists of
isolated one-terminal-pair networks each of which comprises a (negative or positive) resistance in series with a noise voltage generator, and these various noise generators are mutually uncorrelated. The
exchangeable powers from the
isolated terminal pairs are the
invariants of the original network. The invariants have other physical meanings. Each meaning is best brought out by a corresponding particular matrix description of the network. Transformations between matrix descriptions are studied and applied to show that the invariants are interpretable as the
stationary values of the exchangeable power obtainable from any one of the new terminal pairs created by a lossless imbedding, as the imbedding network is varied through all lossless forms. Finally, the two invariants of a two-terminal-pair network are shown to fix the extrema of its noise measure, one of which is known to represent, for an amplifier, the minimum excess noise figure achievable at high gain.Keywords
Circuit noise; Circuit testing; Eigenvalues and eigenfunctions; Electrical resistance measurement; Equivalent circuits; Impedance; Masers; Noise measurement; Optimization methods; Temperature;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Circuit Theory, IRE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0096-2007
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TCT.1958.1086461
Filename
1086461
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