High bandwidth oscilloscopes can be tricky as far as noise. What you are seeing could very well be a local interference source or even a radio transmitter. To test for this see if the noise level changes when you ground the probe, move its cable, or move your hand along it.
Yes, the noise signal amplitude is sensitive to the positioning of the probe cable and/or my physical proximity. Touching the scope on its sides (on the plastic stand end caps) has quite a dramatic effect and sends the triggering haywire. When the oscilloscope inputs are set to DC it is particularly sensitive.
This is another reason coaxial probe connections are so important with high bandwidth oscilloscopes. I can clip the ground lead to the probe tip on mine and use it as an RF sniffer. Compact fluorescent lamps and LED lamps are particularly bad about spewing RF interference everywhere.
This has been my experience as well. Just for kicks I tried to see if I could isolate the source - unplugging fluorescent lights and other items with switching power supplies, but to no avail. I also tried the scope on a power conditioner that I've observed to reduce EMI on connected DC power supplies, but with no effect in this case.
It shows a frequency comfortably higher than the switching power supply operates at so I think you are seeing something external. If you want to double check, switch the channel coupling to ground or use a coaxial short on the end of the probe.
Channel coupling to ground almost completely squashes the interference.
Attached is a pic showing Channel 1 and 2 in "differential mode" (channel two inverted and added to channel 1).
Seeing as though the two almost cancel (with some finagling, albeit), would this suggest the signal is common mode and therefore, external, being picked up by the probes w/ their leads?
You don't happen to have an FM radio station nearby do you.....
That looks comfortably like 100MHz, though if it has any shape is dubious (how would you know in a 200MHz BW?).
Tim
There are radio stations within a 5 mile radius towering over me (I live in Cincinnati, OH if you are familiar). First pic attached shows frequency measurement.