gatedrift
Gatedrift is a term used in electronics and measurement science to describe time-dependent drift in a signal that is introduced or amplified by a gating process. It occurs in systems that sample or route signals through switches or gates, where the act of opening and closing a signal path creates a changing baseline or offset over time. Gatedrift can arise in various contexts, including switched-capacitor circuits, time-of-flight detectors, and ion gates used in spectrometers or other gating-based measurement setups.
The mechanisms behind gatedrift are related to how a gate or switch interacts with the signal path.
In practice, gatedrift affects measurement accuracy, dynamic range, and timing resolution. It can complicate calibration, produce
Mitigation strategies include selecting low-injection switches, employing bootstrapped or differential gating, and using sampling schemes that
See also: drift in electronics, gate, charge injection, switched-capacitor circuit, time-of-flight detectors, ion gate.