I'm trying to build a pink noise generator, but am having a hard time amplifying the ~10nV peak-to-peak noise of a reverse-biased transistor to something that could drive a speaker and actually sound like pink noise (which pretty much sounds like white noise).
(The power supply is +/- 9V)
So my plan was to have a noise-generating stage: NPN with a floating collector and -9V base that has a DC biased emitter that is fed across a coupling capacitor. Simulations say that the output is about 10nV p-to-p.
Then, I fed that to an op amp with negative feedback, but the output (past another coupling capacitor) was only 100nV p-to-p!
What I want is a white noise output that is about 2V p-to-p, but I dont understand analog circuits well enough to confidently know how to do it.
I attached a diagram I lifted from the internet that is about the same thing as what I'm doing...I tried it, but it too produced a p-2-p V that was wayyy too low.
Thanks for any help, I'm really stumped
(The power supply is +/- 9V)
So my plan was to have a noise-generating stage: NPN with a floating collector and -9V base that has a DC biased emitter that is fed across a coupling capacitor. Simulations say that the output is about 10nV p-to-p.
Then, I fed that to an op amp with negative feedback, but the output (past another coupling capacitor) was only 100nV p-to-p!
What I want is a white noise output that is about 2V p-to-p, but I dont understand analog circuits well enough to confidently know how to do it.
I attached a diagram I lifted from the internet that is about the same thing as what I'm doing...I tried it, but it too produced a p-2-p V that was wayyy too low.
Thanks for any help, I'm really stumped