I repeated your test in REW itself using its RTA and saw the output was flat to 10Hz, I thought its full range pink noise was now flat all the way down but perhaps it is still 10Hz and white noise is all the way down.
It's worth saying here that pink and white noise are statistical constructs. Meaning that any given frequency will be present *at some point* in the signal, but not necessarily at any given time. Which is why pink and white noise "bounce all over the screen" when viewed on a responsive RTA.
JL Audio has a very interesting adaptation of this that they use to calibrate their auto-eq systems: They have a special signal that they construct, which has sine waves at 31 center frequencies, all at equal levels. It sounds like a bad, and very full range, organ being played all at once. But it's nice because the signal level is *dead flat*; no bouncing.
If you're really into doing these kinds of measurements at low frequencies, you might steal this idea and make Matt Khan's special low frequency organ note of death: Something like 20 to 30 sine waves, at various low frequencies, all at equal signal levels. Then there would be no doubt whatsoever of the content of the test signal. One naive version of this would be 1 to 20 Hz, at 1 Hz increments.
For bonus points, what signal level in each sine wave is required to achieve right at 0 dBFS total at the output for these 20 sine waves added together?
Brian.