Hello list,
For those of you interested in phase noise measurement without using 
fancy/dedicated gear, here you are the way I have got. Disclaimer: as far as I 
am concerned, all phase noise measurements use a technique to get rid of 
carrier: quadrature mixing, interferometric [more on that, later] and notch 
filters.

The simplest way use notch filters, and the simplest notch filter can be 
arranged with just 3 elements:
- one return loss bridge
- one quartz crystal
- one resistor
Hook the crystal on DUT port, the oscillator to be measured on IN port, the SA 
[spectrum analyzer] on OUT port and the resistor on REF port. The resistor have 
to be determined by trial and error to equal the series resistence of the 
crystal at series resonance. From some -50dB up, can hook a potentiometer in 
parallel to the resistor[s] and fine tune for the deepest notch.
It is easy to get notches as deep as -85-90dB. The filter is useful in close in 
measurements not closer than 100-200Hz from carrier. Yes, between the notch and 
SA you should insert a 40-60dB amplifier. The amplifier will not degrade the 
flicker noise [as there is practical no carrier - see Rubiola papers], but will 
set the noise floor.
The series resonance freq have to be selected from multiple crystals; I have 
experienced series resonance in 10MHz crystals ranging from -300Hz to +100Hz 
against 10MHz sharp, and have selected a crystal resonating at +25Hz at room 
temperature. For exact fit you can either tune the oscillator @+25Hz, or 
better, thermostat the crystal; thermostating the crystal will also tune the 
notch to the desired freq.
My selected crystal was equilibrated by a series resistance of 14.7ohm. Please 
note, the series resistance of other 11 crystals I have tested range from 14ohm 
to tens of ohm.
Regards,
Adrian
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