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It's not clear to me whether you're proposing an alternative definition
for linearity or for superposition. I've never seen superposition defined as other than that the sum of responses to individual excitations be equal to the response to the sum of the excitations -- that's the definition in Pearson & Maler's _Introductory Circuit Analysis_, Van Valkenburg's _Network Analysis_, and the rather old edition of the _IEEE Standard Dictonary of Electrical and Electronic Terms_ I have. Do you have a reference that gives the definition you propose for superposition? If on the other hand the alternative definition is only for linearity, we'd then be faced with the possibility of having a linear (and time-invariant) circuit which doesn't satisfy superposition. That's not a pleasant circumstance to ponder. Roy Lewallen, W7EL K7ITM wrote: I recall a prof or two arm-waving over that one. However, I think if you formulate your definition of linearity properly, the transfer function y=mx+b will still satisfy linearity. Specifically, if the _response_ is the _change_ that occurs in the output going from x=0 to x=x1, then the response for x1 is (m*x1+b)-(m*0+b) = m*x1, and of course for x2, it's m*x2. The response for x=x1+x2 is m*(x1+x2), which is exactly the sum of the responses for x1 and x2. Similarly, for a mixer/LO system with RF input and IF output, if the mixer is unbalanced and lets LO get through, it is still a linear system if the change in output when go from zero input to input x1(t) plus the change in output when you go from zero input to input x2(t) is equal to the change in output when you go from zero input to input (x1(t)+x2(t)). But note that a mixer/LO system is NOT time invariant, because the output for x1(t+delta) is in general NOT the same as the output shifted in time by delta for input x1(t). You can most certainly find text books that define linearity differently than I did above. I find the definition above to be a more useful one, however, and it seems to be the one generally accepted in practice, even if it's not stated accurately in words. Cheers, Tom |
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