User Manual
47 
Figure 29 Bandwidth and Nyquist frequency 
In practice, an oscilloscope's sampling rate should be four or more times its bandwidth: f
S 
= 4f
BW
. 
This way, there is less aliasing and the aliased frequency components have a greater amount of 
attenuation. 
4.3  Memory Depth 
Memory depth refers to the number of points sampled from the waveform that the oscilloscope 
can store in a single trigger sample. It directly reflects the amount of sample memory. There is 
separate  memory  for  each  interleaved  channel  set  (CH1  and  CH2  interleaved,  CH3  and  CH4 
interleaved). The oscilloscope provides up to 140 Mpts memory depth (70 Mpts if two interleaved 
channels are being displayed). 
To change the memory depth 
1.  Press the Acquire button on the front panel. 
2.  Press the Mem Depth softkey. 
3.  Turn the Universal Knob to select the desired value and press the knob to confirm. 
4.  Pressing the Mem Depth softkey repeatedly can also select the desired value. The current 
memory depth is displayed in upper-right corner of the screen. 
The  following  equation  relates  memory  depth  D  (in  samples),  sampling  rate  R  (samples  per 
second), and waveform length T (seconds): 
π· = π
π 
Aliased  frequency 
components
Attenuation 
f
S
/4   f
N
 f
S
-3dB 
Frequency 
0dB 
Limiting oscilloscope bandwidth (f
BW
) to ΒΌ the sample rate (f
s
/4) 
reduces frequency components above the Nyquist frequency (f
N
). 










