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Old January 22nd 05, 04:57 PM
Cecil Moore
 
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Paul Hardwick wrote:
To round up, the question is this: how can the tuner only select those
electrons that are ONLY vibrating at the required frequency, when logic
states that the electron must be bouncing around at the combined, additive
effect of all RF waves hitting it!


You are confusing the RF waves with the electron carriers. The easiest
way to stop confusing waves with carriers is to stand on a cliff
looking out over the ocean. (Fitzgerald's Marine Reserve, just north
of Santa Cruz, CA, is an ideal place.) There are all sorts of waves
using the same water molecule carriers. There are big waves rolling
straight in and smaller waves rolling in at an angle. The waves
rolling in reflect off the beach and roll back out to sea. Each of
these waves maintains a separate identity even though they are using
the same individual water molecules as the wave carriers.

RF waves do the same thing - share individual quantum carriers for
any number of waves. All the waves are superposed on each individual
carrier, but each wave maintains its individual identity.

Note that water waves and RF waves are different kinds of waves but
they do share the above limited characteristic concerning carriers.
--
73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp


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