Someone said that the noise output of the differential amp is sqrt(2) times more than a single device. If this is true, then it proves that the choice of common base or common emitter doesn't affect the noise performance.
Why? A long-tailed pair of transistors can be viewed as an emitter follower driving a common-base amplifier. And the sqrt(2) increase means that both devices contributed an equal amount of noise to the total, even though one is an emitter follower and the other a common-base stage.
You can argue that that only holds for differential output between the collectors and not for either collector taken individually. But then you'd have to explain how one collector could show a different noise level to the other, when the circuit is completely symmetrical.
To my mind, the topology choice may affect the current noise: there would be beta+1 times more of it coming out of the emitter than the base. But it doesn't affect the voltage noise, because that is a voltage source in series with Vbe, and it doesn't matter which end of Vbe you're looking at.
If the source impedance were low enough to swallow the extra noise current, then there would be no difference in noise performance.
Joe Gwinn: Got any more information on your dual mixer thingy?
Why? A long-tailed pair of transistors can be viewed as an emitter follower driving a common-base amplifier. And the sqrt(2) increase means that both devices contributed an equal amount of noise to the total, even though one is an emitter follower and the other a common-base stage.
You can argue that that only holds for differential output between the collectors and not for either collector taken individually. But then you'd have to explain how one collector could show a different noise level to the other, when the circuit is completely symmetrical.
To my mind, the topology choice may affect the current noise: there would be beta+1 times more of it coming out of the emitter than the base. But it doesn't affect the voltage noise, because that is a voltage source in series with Vbe, and it doesn't matter which end of Vbe you're looking at.
If the source impedance were low enough to swallow the extra noise current, then there would be no difference in noise performance.
Joe Gwinn: Got any more information on your dual mixer thingy?
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