enhances the resolution to 10 bits, but the ENOB cannot exceed 9 bits, not even theoretically.
I don't really understand ENOB. I know what the letters stand for, but would appreciate a pointer to something akin to "ENOB for Drooling Idiots: Simplified Version".
I find the following train of thought intuitive.
Picture SNR: Basically a figure out merit that puts the noise of your measurement system in perspective. Easy!
Now, besides noise, your measurement also gets degraded if part of your signal's power ends up in the wrong spot frequency-wise, as it's distorted by your measurement system. Your signal appears as less far above the noise floor, despite the noise floor not rising at all! Therefore, you have to look at SNR and distortion together. There's different measures for this, like THD+N (total harmonic distortion + noise) or SINAD (signal noise and distortion), which are equivalent as long as you're careful to compare apples with apples (bandwidths for noise & distortion etc)
Next, you imagine a perfect ADC that has the same SINAD as your measurement system, and calculate how many bits that theoretical ADC would need to have: presto! ENOB, effective number of bits.
ENOB is super handy as it squeezes a lot of information on a measurement system's performance into one intuitive number.
However, the above caveat of keeping things comparable (bandwidths, amplitudes, what distortion are we talking about etc) explains why ENOB figures are hard to measure, easy to misunderstand and to incorrectly compare, and very rarely given as actual specs for a complex system like a scope, as opposed to eg an ADC. Without a kilobyte of fine print on how exactly this specific ENOB spec was measured, it can do more harm than good precisely
because it looks so nice and intuitive.
Often you're better off just directly comparing a simpler performance metric in one specific comparable situation. Like "Look how much more noise this scope has" or "this one shows steps, the other one is smooth" for the same signal and settings.
I like this analog whitepaper describing things in more detail:
https://www.analog.com/media/en/training-seminars/tutorials/MT-003.pdfNice, concise, and with less scope-chauvinism (well deserved as it may be in some cases) as whitepapers from certain well known scope manufacturers ;-)