I used an impedance checker. My electrode and wire to skin impedance is about 10k to 20k. The test at 8uV noise was at 100 Ohm. If the source resistance increased from 100 ohm to say 15,000 ohm. How do you compute what the noise of 8uV would become?
The increase in resistance, 14,900 ohms in your example, creates two new sources of noise, the Johnson noise of the resistance and added voltage noise from the input current noise multiplied by the resistance. In the example I gave, the voltage noise from the input current noise through the resistance can be ignored because the current noise is so low, which should always be the case with a 1 or 10 megohm input. The Johnson noise dominates in this case.
That leaves the Johnson noise which is equal to 0.13*Sqrt(resistance*bandwidth) nVrms, which would be added to the 8uVrms. Over 10kHz, that will be 1600nVrms or 1.6uVrms, and 8uVrms+1.6uVrms=8.16uVrms.
And how is noise related to the input resistance/impedance. The unit has input impedance of 10 megaohms (see last message for the full spec sheet). If you'd use the voltage divider concept. The 100 ohm vs 15,000 ohm would not have much significant against the 10 megaohm input impedance. But how about noise? Why is noise more affected by increase in the input impedance.
The input impedance of the amplifier does not really matter, except insofar as an amplifier with a high input impedance must have a low input current, which requires using parts and a design which has higher input voltage noise. When modeled, the input impedance is a resistance across the input. This resistor contributes its own noise, however since the source impedance is across the input also, it effectively shorts that resistance and noise out.
Also stand alone EEG, ECG, EMG units have fixed frequency. In the UFI unit, it is adjustable from 20, 50, 100, 1000, 5000, 10000 Hz. What parts of the circuits need adjustments for these switches? And would they introduce more noises? Why. Thanks!
They probably use a mechanically switched lowpass filter for that, which requires switching various combinations of resistance and capacitance into the circuit after amplification. All resistances and active elements add noise, however this can be ignored because the noise level in the circuit after amplification is much higher so later contributions are negligible.