Two charts attached that can be regarded as the readout from oscilloscopes, one with 1/f noise and the other without.
The upper chart of AD8676 looks to have about 100 nV pk-pk noise while the lower LT2057 has 200 nV pk-pk noise. Both have random "spikes" in voltage while only the upper plot appears to have shifts in the running average noise voltage (hard to tell with different vertical scale factors). Is that the 1/f noise characteristic to which you refer?
Perhaps a related question- How can LT claim the noise voltage plot is representative of a DC - 10 Hz bandwidth with just a 10 second recording?
Broadly speaking, yes. It's getting late here so I'll say some conclusions first and will explain why tomorrow.
The chart above for AD8676 is the noise for 0.1Hz to 10Hz bandwidth. If we modify the the bandwidth as 1mHz to 0.1Hz, or modify the the bandwidth as 0.01mHz to 1mHz, the chart will be the same(similar shape, same 100nVp-p). This can go on forever and theoretically these noise(of limitless bandwidth) will be added up and there is no boundary, and you cannot claim anything for bandwidth of DC-10Hz, that is the characteristic of 1/f noise.
However, for LTC2057, Vp-p will be dropped(to 1/100th or 1/10th?) if bandwidth is 0.001Hz to 0.1Hz, and continue to drop for lower frequencies bandwidth.
For the second question, for an opamp without 1/f noise, the Vp-p contribution from low frequency has a limit/boundary, the Vp-p noise for 0.1Hz-10Hz is not much smaller than 0.001Hz-10Hz which virtually the same as DC-10Hz.
Edit: From wiki:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pink_noise'There is equal energy in all octaves (or similar log bundles) of frequency.'
In another word, all frequency bandwidths of below carry equal energy:
1-10Hz, 0.1-1Hz, 0.01-0.1Hz, 0.1m-0.01Hz, 0.01mHz-0.1mHz,,,,,, 0.01uHz-0.1uHz,,,,,
Therefore, in theory, there is infinite amount of energy in DC-10Hz spectrum for 1/f noise source.