Hiya-
Well, it's a Smith CHART. A drafting tool (chart) used
to "swing" impedance though it's wavelength. Typically
used to include a "stub" impedance (short piece of coax,
waveguide, twisted pair, pieces of copper on a PCB, etc.)
to modify the impedance seen by either a source or a load.
Named after Phillip Hagar Smith, a diagram designed along
these lines was constructed in early 1937. It is
essentially the form still being used today.
Scaler impedance can be measured by taking the root of the
product of the unknown with the opposite end open by the
opposite end shorted. Z = sqrt(Zo * Zs)
Depending upon the frequencies of interest, these pieces
could show the source (or load) anything from a dead short
(AC) to an open impedance. The goal is to "match" the
impedance of the transmission line to the impedance of the
source/load.
Here's one link:
On a google search I ran into the Agilent site which has
the following little phrase:
'"Smith" is a registered trademark of Analog Instruments
Company of New Providence, NJ 07974.'
Hope that this helps getting you started.
Cheers,
Rich S.