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Re: Sideband Production
Subject:
Re: Sideband Production
Date:
Mon, 24 Mar 1997 11:12:03 +1200
From:
"Malcolm Watts" <MALCOLM-at-directorate.wnp.ac.nz>
Organization:
Wellington Polytechnic, NZ
To:
tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
Hi all,
Since I've stuck my neck out on this one, I will explain
why the sidebands disappear below critical coupling. The reason is
simple - the circuits are losing energy (in their resistances etc.)
at a rate greater than or comparable to, the rate at which energy is
being transferred from one circuit to another. The trade becomes one-
way in those cases or more correctly, dissipates entirely before it
can go a second time around. This amounts to maximum transmission
given the losses but *not* efficient transmission since the primary
can lose as much as the secondary. This is equivalent to matching a
sink impedance to a source impedance.
Efficient transmission is the equivalent to running a speaker
from a low impedance amplifier source at full power output. For a
typical audio system, Rsource << Rsink except in amps that use no
negative feedback (e.g. some valve amps where the speaker is matched
to the anode impedance). A switchmode power supply is another example.
Compare load heating with power supply heating at full power. A
further example is the mains supply. Another one yet is a modern AM
radio transmitter where the modulator is actually a switchmode power
supply. In an efficient power delivery system, the load alone dictates
the rate of energy transfer.
Malcolm