Hardware-random-bits interface

Peter Monta pmonta at qualcomm.com
Wed Nov 15 12:16:53 PST 1995


> > And if one is left with only internal noise, why not simply use a nice
> > clean source like a Zener diode?
> 
> Quite solidly agreed. Internal noise beats external noise, and there
> is no point in using a radio receiver when what you want is internal
> noise.

It may have been misleading to refer to a radio receiver chip:  the
noise generated by the chip will be entirely internal.  It doesn't
depend on any external signal "sneaking in"; the noise comes from
the effective resistance of the first amplifier stage.  Nothing
is being "received", in some sense; it's just a big hunk 'o gain.

A Zener diode would be fine, but the design is a bit more complex,
especially for wide bandwidths---you need to mess with biasing
voltages, speedy op-amps, interface to CMOS, and all that jazz.
You'd need external power (or a DC-DC converter).  I wanted a
super-simple design that people could just plonk down on a PC
board.  Two chips and some bypass capacitors.

Peter







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