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Locate a tuning fork. Mount it any way you please. Then check it from
time to time to see if it spontaneously begins a sustained ringing. As a mechanical engineer, you're well acquainted with the differential equations that describe the motion of a physical object that's been struck, for example a tuning fork. And you'll recall that the form of the solution is a decaying sinusoid. An antenna or other resonant circuit obeys the same equations and behaves the same way. In electrical parlance, this response to excitation is called "ringing", after the obvious physical equivalent. While a tuning fork or an antenna will ring if excited, an antenna won't spontaneously ring, or produce a sustained oscillation without an external source of power -- for exactly the same reasons a tuning fork won't. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Art Unwin KB9MZ wrote: Richard, If I have a loop circuit unconnected to a transmitter could it not oscillate under ideal conditions? If it can then would it not radiate at the frequency that it is resonant at as well as reradiate at the frequency of the energy input Regards Art |
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