Can one also create 1mV differential circuit at 10,000 Hz (instead of just 1000Hz) with only 1uV spot noise instead of 8uV spot noise. What components will you use at 1mV, 10000Hz with below 1 uV spot noise?
Well, let's do an not unduly complicated paper design using the best operational amplifiers available for this application. We want low noise from DC to 10 kHz, which also means low offset voltage drift, and low input bias current and low input current noise to support higher source resistance.
A two operational amplifier differential input stage will provide the highest possible input impedance and common mode noise rejection, but double the noise. Current noise can be ignored for JFET inputs with the resistances we will calculate. Actual noise is a little bit higher because it rises below 10kHz, but not by a lot.
OPA828 0.57uVrms to 10kHz 0.82uVrms 8.2nV/SqrtHz 4 kilohms
OPA140 0.72uVrms to 10kHz 0.69uVrms 6.9nV/SqrtHz 2.8 kilohms
ADA4625 0.47uVrms to 10kHz 0.88uVrms 8.8nV/SqrtHz 4.6 kilohms
The first number is the voltage noise from the amplifier, the second number is the maximum noise from the source to stay below 1uVrms noise, the third number is the associated noise density to stay below 1uVrms noise, and the last number is the source resistance which would produce that noise.
So for each amplifier type, the last number shows the maximum source resistance which will keep the total input noise below 1uVrms, from DC to 10kHz. As the amplifier noise decreases, then maximum source resistance that can be tolerated increases.
So noise below 1uVrms to 10kHz is very feasible, at least with low source resistances. If the bandwidth only extends to 1kHz, then higher source resistances are tolerable.
Note that the source resistance applies to both inputs of each operational amplifier and the feedback networks add their own noise, so I am assuming that the feedback network has an arbitrarily low parallel resistance for arbitrarily low noise. In this case that may require that buffers be added to the output of each operational amplifier to drive the their own feedback networks, but hey, we spared no expense. For buffers I might use AD812 current feedback amplifiers, but 4 transistor diamond buffers or something more complicated could also be used. Adding the buffers may require some frequency compensation tweaks around the operational amplifiers to maintain stability.
If the source resistances are significantly lower, then the JFET operational amplifiers can be replaced with bipolar input parts for lower noise. Or a low noise discrete JFET pair from Linear Systems could be used for lower noise at higher source resistances, but examine the AM502 schematics to see how complex this could be.