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Peter O. Brackett wrote:
. . . Yes indeed, we must be talking at cross purposes, since we seem to have no disagreement on any of the above. I don't see where we differ at all! For starters, a circularly polarized wave, as universally understood, has an E field which is constant in amplitude, rotates in synchronism with the rotational frequency of the field, and has a particular relationship to constituent linearly polarized components. The field you're generating doesn't, yet you're calling it "circularly polarized". [snip] Would the rate of spin have to be 99-44/100 percent of the synchronous frequency? Or would it have to be closer than that? At what magic spin frequency would the two be indistinguisable. [snip] I would repeat the above question in a slightly different way... How much frequency, or for that matter phase, difference must there be between the mechanical spin frequency and the carrier frequency before you could tell the difference between your "conventionally defined" circular polarization and my definition? Any difference at all. If there's even a tiny difference, the E field will change in amplitude with time. If it's perfectly synchronous it won't. The rate at which it changes with time is the difference between the field rotation frequency and the frequency of the generated signal. If they're synchronous, the difference is zero, and no change in amplitude with time. If my antenna was spining with an angular velocity within say, 0.000000000005% of the carrier frequency, would that do it? If by "it" you mean make the difference non-discernible, the answer is no. See above. Or perhaps my spin rate would have to be closer to the carrier frequency than that? See above. If so, then how close does it have to be to qualify to be called circular polarization under (your) traditional/conventional definition? They have to be identical. See above. The question you posed earlier was different, involving detection of the difference with a particular kind of antenna. Like the linear antenna you used in another example, it filters the signal which alters its properties. So my answer to this new question is different. [snip] What you'll end up with is amplitude modulation with the modulating frequency being the beat note between your spinning speed and the wave frequency. This creates sidebands. You'll see this when the sidebands are within the bandwidth of the helix. Outside that, the helix will filter off the sidebands and you'll just see the "carrier" -- the original wave with no modulation. [snip] Hmmm... Yes, I agree and that's partially correct, but some of the above paragraph is somewhat "fuzzy" to say the least. That helix must be a very sharp [brick wall???] filter, no? No. Let's get real here, no practical implementation of any kind of physical filtering mechanism can filter with infinitely sharp transition bands. It just doesn't happen in nature. That's not required, although I see it's how you've interpreted my use of "bandwidth". There is no such brick wall rejection region. [snip] Here's a really neat little trick you might want to add to your bag -- superposition. As I mentioned, you can create a circularly polarized wave from two linearly polarized waves. The linearly polarized waves are of course normally time-varying. As long as the propagation medium is linear (such as air), superposition says you can split the circularly polarized wave apart into two linearly polarized waves, study and analyze how they propagate, then add the two components back together again after the propagation. This is, incidentally, a very simple way to see what happens when a circularly polarized wave reflects from a surface -- analyze the linear components separately and add the results. [snip] Heh, heh... Superposition is not a 'trick' it is a well known principle and Roy, I agree with all of the above! What's your point? You don't believe that a wave with constant amplitude E field can propagate. My point is that the constant E field amplitude circularly polarized wave can be made of the sum of two time-varying waves. Each of these waves can propagate. If you're familiar with superposition it should be obvious that the original wave can be split into those components, each component and its propagation can be analyzed separately, and the results summed at the far end of the path. That's how a CP wave having a constant amplitude can propagate. Bringing up superposition is fine, but you seem to raise the concept of superposition simply as a digression here, not as a means of disproving my assertion that mechanically spinning a linear antenna is tantamount to conventional circular polarization. No, it was brought up to demonstrate how a wave having a constant amplitude E field can propagate. You had used the argument that a circularly polarized wave can't propagate because its E field has a constant amplitude, as support for your incorrect assertion that the amplitude of the E field of a circularly polarized varies with time. A circularly polarized wave has a constant amplitude E field, which can be easily demonstrated from the equations describing it. It propagates. Your pseudo-circularly polarized wave doesn't have a constant amplitude E field, which is only one way it differs from a circularly polarized wave. [snip] That's about all I can do at this end. I can't make you actually pick up a text and learn about circularly polarized waves, and until you do, you'll have some fundamental misconceptions about them. [snip] Hmmm... that was a cheap shot! Unfortunately I agree, YOU cannot make me pick up a text. However, I can make myself do so myself, and... it may (or may not) interest you to know that I have done so on many occasions. In fact I have picked up several such texts, addressing such subject matter authored by Physicists and Engineers ranging over subjects as diverse as radio frequency antennas and optics. Would it impress you if I sent you a picture of my personal library of several hundred volumes, which contains perhaps a dozen or more textbooks on electromagnetics. Since I have been examined on these subjects at graduate degree levels by the faculty at several duly accredited Universities it seems that there is some evidence that I may have read and understood at least a few paragraphs from those texts that I "picked up"! [smile] I'm impressed, but it's not apparent to me why, with those resources available, you're having trouble finding how the amplitude of the circularly polarized wave E field varies with time, or applying superposition to discover how it propagates. Choose one or two of your texts which has the equations for circularly polarized waves. Chances are good that I have the same text, and if you'd like I can show you how to derive the instantaneous E field amplitude from the equations. But I'm afraid you would have to pick it up to find the equations. But if you can do that, you might be able to write the equations describing your signal, and then the differences between it and the CP equations should become obvious. [snip] Guess I'm one of those folks who someone described recently as "having the common sense educated out of me". It's served me well, since it's enabled me able to spend a career designing a wide variety of state of the art electronic circuits and antennas, successfully mass produced, which work as designed. But I know it's not for everyone. [snip] Hmmm... I too have spent (wasted?) most of several decades designing electronic products and equipment for international markets sold in more than 40 countries with at total sales volume exceeding $5BB dollars. And it seems in today's world that if you combine that Engineering experience with $2.50 you can buy a cup of coffee at Starbucks! Now that we have suitably set the stage, lets get back to the common sense Engineering question at hand! All I need is a number! Oh, if that's all you need, 42 is always a good choice. Perhaps I should regurgitate the statement of Lord Kelvin about knowledge that dear departed Reg used to quote. You know... the one about quantifying things, the one that says you know nothing unless you can put a number to it! Do I really need to do that here? Reggie dear friend, are you watching from above? Roy, please answer the following common sense Engineering questions, just how close must the angular velocity of my spinning antenna be to the carrier frequency before YOU will allow it to be called circular polarization? It must be exactly the same. A simple numerical value in percentage form would do fine! 0. |
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