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Avery Fineman wrote:
In article , Peter John Lawton writes: The above will hold true at any fundamental frequency provided the rise and fall times are equal and each equal to 0.02 times the repetition period. Those numbers will change given faster or slower rise/fall times. All db calculated as 20 x Log (voltage). Width is determined at the baseline, not the 50% amplitude point. Len Anderson retired (from regular hours) electronic engineer person I wonder what happens to these numbers as the rise/fall time tends to zero? The harmonic content will increase...but also show dips depending on the percentage width relative to the period. I could present those (takes only minutes to run the program and transcribe the results) but that is academic only. The rise and fall times will NOT be zero due to the repetition frequency being high (repetition time short). Consider that a 3 MHz waveform has a period of 333 1/3 nSec and that Paul is using a TTL family inverter to make the square wave. Even with a Schmitt trigger inverter the t_r and t_f are going to be finite, possibly 15 nSec with a fast device (and some capacitive loading or semi-resonant whatever to mess with on- and off-times). 15 nSec is 4.5% of the repetition period, quite finite...more than I showed on the small table given previously. I'm sure someone out there wants to argue minutae on numbers but what is being discussed is a squarish waveform with a repetition frequency in the low HF range. Periods are valued in nanoSeconds and the on/off times of squaring devices are ALSO in nanoSeconds. There's just NOT going to be any sort of "zero" on/off times with practical logic devices used by hobbyists. I just wondered from a theoretical point of view what the program would say about the harmonic content as you decreased the values you put into it for t_r and t_f. What is not intuitive to me (and to others) is that harmonic energy of a rectangular waveform drops drastically by the 5th harmonic and is certainly lower than "obvious" numbers bandied about. This is connected with my question. I am pondering why the energy available for higher harmonics is less than for the fundamental and also how your program works out this energy. But, also mentioned before by others is that shortening the rect- angular waveshape DOES increase the 5th harmonic, as evident by the approximate 12 db increase at 40 to 35 percent of the repetition period. Its like pushing the baby on the swing in the park, you only need to give it the occasional push or pull in the right direction. A 5f resonator gets has to go for 2.5 cycles in between refuelling from a square-wave (1:1) of frequency f. With a mark/space ratio of 2:3 it looks to me as though the 'pull' on the 5f resonator as the rectangular wave drops will take out all the energy that was put in on the preceding 'push' - so no 5th harmonic. On the other hand, 1.5:3.5 (30%) should be just as good for 5th as 1:1 (but no better). All that's assuming a zero t_r and t_f. In practice it must be that the energy transfer to a resonator depends on these times. It seems that the energy transfer is not so great to a faster resonator. Pursuing the swing analogy, your arm has to move faster than the swing if you're going to add to the swings energy. An equivalent shortening happens in vacuum tube multipliers through biasing (self, fixed, or both) and that can be adjustable along with the drive level. It's not quite the same with bipolars since the overdrive effects are more saturation than in the self- bias conditions of tubes. It's close, though. From all indications of the Fourier series results, there's a definite reason why so few multipliers went beyond tripling. The amount of energy (relative to fundamental and taking into account the finite rise and fall times) of 4th and higher harmonics just isn't as much as intuition would have everyone believe! What do you mean by intuition here? My intuition suggests to me that as the rise and fall times get shorter, the energy available for the harmonics approaches that for the fundamental. In other words, as a square wave approaches perfection it gains the ability to stimulate all odd harmonic resonators equally - but surely that can't be right. Possibly the energy transfer to a f and (say) 5f resonator approaches the same value but the 5f resonator loses 5 energy at five times the rate of the f one, assuming equal Q. Peter Len Anderson retired (from regular hours) electronic engineer person |
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