It's flat, not even a pixel off, despite adding 2cm or more of lead length? (Nevermind what variation in the clip leads might be.)
Plot looks to be log, so a pixel is about 10%. 10% of 60mohm is 6mohm. 6mohm at 500kHz is ~2nH inductance. The pictured connection easily adds ten times more, therefore the measurement is erroneous.
Nice to know it can't measure inductances that small, I guess?
Only using identical caps though - if you parallel different caps you will broaden (hopefully) the lowest range of impedance curve. Obviously adding 10uF and 100nF in parallel will not lower ESR as such shown above.
Obviously it
will -- but it depends where you're measuring it, and what you're adding. If those are ceramic caps, their ESR valleys will be around 10 and 100mohms respectively. They will dominate over Fc = 1 / (2 pi (100mohm) (10uF)) = 160kHz. If you're working below that frequency, the 100mohm electrolytic will dominate, but above, the ceramic(s) will dominate. (Also, if there's say 5nH between the two ceramics, they'll be parallel resonant around 7.1MHz with Zo = 0.22 ohm, which will be reasonably damped by the ESR of the 0.1 or the electrolytic. Best placement would be with the 0.1 towards the electrolytic.)
This is also a handy method to keep harmonics, if not the most powerful fundamental, away from electrolytics that aren't quite rated for enough ripple current otherwise. Use ceramics at low voltage, or film at high voltage. (Or also, at low voltage, just using polymers, which are basically films if they could be made in proportionally low voltages and high capacities -- their ESR, ripple rating, and energy density are quite similar.)
Tim