Quote:
Originally Posted by space2012 |
Dude, i already know what jitter is.
But i don't think you get it.
Look at this pdf, page 9, right side.
It sais:
"Jitter: Jitter refers to the amount of
aperiodicity in a clock signal, and
is generally measured in ‘nanoseconds’ (ns or 10-9 s)."
Jitter is not periodic.
The screenshots you showed were periodic differences, not aperiodic.
Therefore it cannot be jitter.
Is it clear now?
Jitter would result in a different waveform being sampled every time.