7J20: Difference between revisions

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Tektronix-J20 UV Fiber Optic Sensor-Full-lores.JPG | J20 UV Fiber Optic Sensor
Tektronix-J20 UV Fiber Optic Sensor-Head-lores.JPG | J20 UV Fiber Optic Sensor Head
Tektronix-J20 UV Fiber Optic Sensor-Slit-lores.JPG | J20 UV Fiber Optic Sensor Slit
Tektronix-J20 Ring Adapter-Face-hires.JPG  | J20 Mounting Ring Adapter - Face
Tektronix-J20 UV Fiber Optic Sensor-Ring Adpapter-Back-hires.JPG |J20 Mounting Ring Adapter - Back
Tektronix-J20 UV Fiber Optic Sensor-Ring Adpater-Side-hires.JPG |J20 Mounting Ring Adapter - Side
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Revision as of 08:26, 6 November 2019

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The Tektronix 7J20, which only appears in the 1975 catalog, is a "rapid scan" optical spectrometer for the 250 nm to 1100 nm region. Rapid scan means that it can capture the spectrum quickly enough to show spectral changes at temporal resolution of a few milliseconds. The spectrometer is packaged in two enclosures linked by an umbilical cable. The 7J20 is a 2-wide plug-in for 7000-series scopes containing the sweep timing and mainframe interface circuits. The external enclosure is labeled "J20". It has controls for the optical components (grating, filters etc.) on one side and an input aperture on the other.

Internals

The instrument is based on a Czerny-Turner Monochromator, in essence a narrow slit followed by a diffraction grating. A vidicon tube scans the optical spectrum and produces a periodic electric signal which is then displayed by the scope mainframe.

Operating principle (click to enlarge)

The internal vidicon horizontal scan voltage corresponds to wavelength, but not in a linear way. To provide a linear nm/div horizontal display on the 7000-series mainframe, the vidicon horizontal scan signal is passed through a function generator IC, the 155-0106-00 (U1550 and U1590), which implements an interpolated lookup table. Inside the 7J20, there are 40 trimmer potentiometers that allow the lookup function to be tweaked so that the horizontal scale of the system is accurate.

Normalizer (click to enlarge)

The 7J20 is very rare. According to Dennis Tillman, Best estimate is ~40 were actually built.

Key Specifications

Spectral range 250 nm to 1100 nm
Resolution (Grating A) ≤4 nm in a 400 nm span (selectable 300-700, 400-800, 500-900, 600-1000, or 700-1100 nm
Resolution (Grating B) ≤0.4 nm in a 40 nm span continuously variable through the spectral range
Slit 10 to 5000 μm wide (1-2-5 sequence), 10 mm high
Filters ND1, ND 2, 500 nm monopass, 800 nm monopass, UV block (≤400 nm), UV pass (250-330 nm), open (no filter)
Scan 10 or 20 ms base sweep, 50 to 1000 ms (1-2-5) settings run successive 20 ms sweeps up to the selected integration time
Display span Grating A, 40, 20, 10 or 4 nm/Div ; Grating B, 4, 2, 1 or 0.4 nm/Div

Price

$12,000 in 1975 ($57,000 equivalent in 2018)

Links

Pictures