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#1
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Aren't you glad we don't generally have to worry about nonlinearities
in the propagation of our waves (through space or along transmission lines)? (Well, maybe you do if you aren't using a reasonable model for your lines...) Following is from an e-newsletter I get: "Did you know that a wave breaks when the water underneath supporting the wave is only about 1.3 times as deep as the wave is high? When that happens, the water at the crest is moving faster than the water below. Most often, waves break in shallow water near the shore, but waves may also break father off if the wave is high enough." |
#2
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In message , Tom Bruhns
writes Aren't you glad we don't generally have to worry about nonlinearities in the propagation of our waves (through space or along transmission lines)? (Well, maybe you do if you aren't using a reasonable model for your lines...) Following is from an e-newsletter I get: But propagation is non-linear through the ionosphere. The velocity varies with the electron density. Otherwise the wave wouldn't bend. Mike -- M.J.Powell |
#3
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But propagation is non-linear through the ionosphere. The velocity
varies with the electron density. Otherwise the wave wouldn't bend. This is not nonlinearity, it is refraction: velocity varies with location in the medium. Nonlinearity is if the velocity varies with the amplitude of the wave. Like in acoustics where the positive (high-pressure) peaks propagate faster than the negative peaks. It leads to waveform distortion and creation of harmonics. The modern cardiology ultrasound scanners ( 5 years old) usually default to this mode these days, transmitting ultrasound at about 3 MHz, receiving at 6 MHz, as it gives better image quality than the fundamental mode. Sverre www.qsl.net/la3za |
#4
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If I understand what you are saying then a vertical EM ground wave
suffers from non-linear [distortion], as you define it. The surface component of the wave is in a dielectric media, earth ground, with a propagation constant less than the velocity of light. While the top of the EM wave is propagating in a 377 ohm medium, air, with a velocity of propagation close to the velocity of light. So, the top of the wave travels faster than the bottom and the wave tilts in the direction of propagation and ultimately 'falls' to earth. You are implying that a wave from a single source but traveling in two or more different mediums suffer non-linearity. Doesn't that mean that non-linearity is applicable to all EM waves involved in different media? I believe that Maxwell-Heaviside's Curl equations at the boundary conditions can be solved for this condition. [It's been over 40 years since I tried it though!] I have a problem with the words 'non linear as used in this thread. 'Non-linearity' is generally understood to introduce harmonics, i.e. distortion. For an EM wave sharing a common boundary in different linear media I offer that the wave 'rolls' in the direction of propagation but does not create harmonics from some non-linear process. Deacon Dave, W1MCE + + + [SNIP] Nonlinearity is if the velocity varies with the amplitude of the wave. Like in acoustics where the positive (high-pressure) peaks propagate faster than the negative peaks. It leads to waveform distortion and creation of harmonics. The modern cardiology ultrasound scanners ( 5 years old) usually default to this mode these days, transmitting ultrasound at about 3 MHz, receiving at 6 MHz, as it gives better image quality than the fundamental mode. Sverre www.qsl.net/la3za |
#5
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Some years back I was involved in experiments directed at making a very
fast voltage step by using a transmission line periodically loaded with diodes. While this structure can be made with packaged diodes and twinlead, the structures we were working with were balanced microstrip on a GaAs substrate, with integrated diodes. (Stanford University had some patents for this implementation.) It used exactly the principle Sverre is speaking of -- the velocity factor was altered by the diode capacitance, which in turn was a function of the wave amplitude. The net result is that one edge of a pulse was made sharper and the other more gentle as the pulse propagated along the line. Harmonics are generated by this nonlinear operation. You might be confusing this with dispersion, which is different frequencies traveling at different velocities. This commonly occurs on microstrip lines due to some of the field being in the dielectric and some in the air, with the relative proportions changing with frequency. (It's also common in waveguides and, I believe, optical media.) This is a linear effect and doesn't generate harmonics, and in fact can be produced by linear lumped components in what's known as an allpass filter. The time-domain waveform distortion it causes is due solely to differing phase shifts, or delays, of the constituent frequency-domain components. That's different from the amplitude-related velocity dependence of the nonlinear lines. Intutitively, a test for harmonic-causing distortion might be to see what happens when you apply a single sine wave. Dispersion and other linear phenomena will change the amplitude and phase of the waveform, but not the shape. But a nonlinear phenomenon like the diode-loaded line or other amplitude sensitive properties will change the shape and, therefore, create new frequencies. It's pretty easy to show that the amplitude related velocity property doesn't satisfy the classical definition and requirement for linearity that the response to the sum of two excitations is the same as the sum of the responses to the individual excitations, while a property like dispersion does. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Dave Shrader wrote: If I understand what you are saying then a vertical EM ground wave suffers from non-linear [distortion], as you define it. The surface component of the wave is in a dielectric media, earth ground, with a propagation constant less than the velocity of light. While the top of the EM wave is propagating in a 377 ohm medium, air, with a velocity of propagation close to the velocity of light. So, the top of the wave travels faster than the bottom and the wave tilts in the direction of propagation and ultimately 'falls' to earth. You are implying that a wave from a single source but traveling in two or more different mediums suffer non-linearity. Doesn't that mean that non-linearity is applicable to all EM waves involved in different media? I believe that Maxwell-Heaviside's Curl equations at the boundary conditions can be solved for this condition. [It's been over 40 years since I tried it though!] I have a problem with the words 'non linear as used in this thread. 'Non-linearity' is generally understood to introduce harmonics, i.e. distortion. For an EM wave sharing a common boundary in different linear media I offer that the wave 'rolls' in the direction of propagation but does not create harmonics from some non-linear process. Deacon Dave, W1MCE + + + [SNIP] Nonlinearity is if the velocity varies with the amplitude of the wave. Like in acoustics where the positive (high-pressure) peaks propagate faster than the negative peaks. It leads to waveform distortion and creation of harmonics. The modern cardiology ultrasound scanners ( 5 years old) usually default to this mode these days, transmitting ultrasound at about 3 MHz, receiving at 6 MHz, as it gives better image quality than the fundamental mode. Sverre www.qsl.net/la3za |
#6
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Deacon Dave wrote:
"For an EM wave sharing a common boundary in different media, I offer that the wave "rolls" in the direction of propagation but does not create harmonics from some non-linear process." That sounds right to me. All those medium wave broadcast signals propagate along the earth`s surface and the differences of peopagation velocities in earth and air tend to give the waves a tilt toward the earth as they travel.. It`s as if the wave were "dragging its feet" as it travels. Many waves share common paths, but I don`t recall hearing that signals sharing those paths got mixed by the experience. This is a fair indication of linearity of the earth/air boundary. There has been speculation about the "Luxemburg effect". Radio Luxemburg hit the air with extreme power long ago. Many listeners, to other signals thought to share the same ionospheric volume with Radio Luxemburg, reported hearing Radio Luxemburg`s modulation on their received signals. It was assumed a non-linear effect in the ionosphere caused the mixing and could be triggered somehow by transmitted power were it high enough. The Luxemburg effect interested propaganda broadcasters and their jammers among others. As far as I know, none has been successful in exploiting the Luxemburg effect. Sometimes we get lucky. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#7
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Geez, I'm glad too. It must happen only on certain frequencies. Just
t'other day I was listenin to th' Chicken Band, and all these guys was yellin "Breaker! Breaker!". . . And sure enough, there was all this splatter. . . Roy Lewallen, W7EL Tom Bruhns wrote: Aren't you glad we don't generally have to worry about nonlinearities in the propagation of our waves (through space or along transmission lines)? (Well, maybe you do if you aren't using a reasonable model for your lines...) Following is from an e-newsletter I get: "Did you know that a wave breaks when the water underneath supporting the wave is only about 1.3 times as deep as the wave is high? When that happens, the water at the crest is moving faster than the water below. Most often, waves break in shallow water near the shore, but waves may also break father off if the wave is high enough." |
#8
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On Wed, 10 Sep 2003 15:06:36 -0700, Roy Lewallen
wrote: Geez, I'm glad too. It must happen only on certain frequencies. Just t'other day I was listenin to th' Chicken Band, and all these guys was yellin "Breaker! Breaker!". . . And sure enough, there was all this splatter. . . Roy Lewallen, W7EL Tom Bruhns wrote: Aren't you glad we don't generally have to worry about nonlinearities in the propagation of our waves (through space or along transmission lines)? (Well, maybe you do if you aren't using a reasonable model for your lines...) Following is from an e-newsletter I get: "Did you know that a wave breaks when the water underneath supporting the wave is only about 1.3 times as deep as the wave is high? When that happens, the water at the crest is moving faster than the water below. Most often, waves break in shallow water near the shore, but waves may also break father off if the wave is high enough." Roy: What about the Luxemburg effect? Jack K8ZOA |
#9
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Nontheless Maxwell's Equations remain linear.
73, H. NQ5H Transmission of EM waves as predicted by Maxwell is linear, and the propagation of these waves through the ionosphere is non-linear. Sounds good to me. 73 Gary N4AST |
#10
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Timely thoughts, as I'm building relativistic particle detectors utilizing
Cherenkov radiation. The usual comparison of Cherenkov to the sonic shock wave is only partially useful, as the electromagnetic phenomenon is linear. Propagation "non-linearities" do not produce radiation at another frequency and are in fact chromatic aberrations. A non-linearity would produce radiation at new frequencies. 73, H. NQ5H "JGBOYLES" wrote in message ... Nontheless Maxwell's Equations remain linear. 73, H. NQ5H Transmission of EM waves as predicted by Maxwell is linear, and the propagation of these waves through the ionosphere is non-linear. Sounds good to me. 73 Gary N4AST |
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