Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#14
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
The "pulse" is the envelope of the RF energy. Lots of frequencies more like
white noise actually, start suddenly, trail off not quite so quickly. Similar to a radar pulse. Two things. RF, pulse modulated. Omnidirectionally radiated. Does that help? -- Crazy George Remove NO and SPAM from return address "snarf" wrote in message ... Without sounding like too much of a wise guy, please explain the single electromagnetic pulse generated during a nuclear or other type of large explosion. Does a certain degree of oscillation (ringing) occur to explain the vast distances travelled by what one would assume was a single large pulse? Snarf "Richard Harrison" wrote in message ... Nic Santean wrote: "-from "The Beginners`s Handbook of Amateur Radio" by Clay Laster, page 260." Clay used many words to say the signal propagates too far to get back to the radiator. It continues its journey away from the radiator. Radiation is really caused by exchange of energy between alternating magnetic and electric fields. They produce each other when they alternate. Static fields don`t radiate. They soon fade away. J.C. Maxwell speculated that displacement current produces the same alternating magnetic lines as conduction current does. He was proved right. "Static" magnetic and electric fields move out into space when current flows and charge builds. When they are no longer changing, the fields at some distance have reached practical limits and stop expanding. Alternate these fields, and the fields can build each other and travel on and on. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5 WZI |