On Sun, Oct 15, 2006 at 10:08:32AM -0400, graywolf wrote:
> The sensor output is an analog voltage. The ADC converts that to a 
> digital number. What is being said here is that they do not feel the max 
> output voltage from the sensor is high enough to require a 22 bit ADC. 
> As I said in another post I feel that is way over simplified.

No - it's nothing to do with max output voltage.

To measure the voltage output from the sensor to a *precision*
(not maximum value) of 22 bits mean's you are claiming to be
able to measure a voltage change a couple of orders of magnitude
smaller than would be produced by one electron more or less in
the sensor well.   At these levels the voltage isn't "analog"
in the sense that you understand the word, with a nice smooth
continuous curve going from empty to full - it goes up in steps.

In fact the illustrative graphs that were posted earlier are
a good illustration of what I mean (albeit perhaps not quite
the way the original writer intended them to be used :-).
The nice smooth continuous curve is an illustration of what
you could measure with a 22-bit processing system; the red
dots show the levels you would actually measure in the real
world.  Fitting that nice smooth 22-bit curve to the sampled
data points is inventing data that doesn't really exist.


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