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"rickman" wrote in message
... I thought it might be that, but it still makes no sense to me. Who or how does changing the direction of rotation of a rotating vector change its "size". Are you defining size as the rotation so that going from a + to a - is like reversing the direction of a vector? I think most people would consider the "size" of a vector to be the magnitude which is independent of phase angle and so rotation, no? Perhaps you can explain this with a little math? Not my gibberish, refer to the original posting ... -----ooooo----- From: "Brian Reay" Newsgroups: alt.engineering.electrical,uk.radio.amateur Subject: Phase noise Date: Sat, 13 Dec 2003 10:21:54 -0000 Message-ID: The term e^(-jwt) isn't some magical time machine relating to "minus time", e^(-jwt) is simply another way of writing 1/(e^jwt) which is a value that decreases as t increasing. |
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