On Jun 29, 9:15 pm, John Smith I <assemblywiz...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Radium wrote:
>
> WTF are you thinking when you describe the 20 Khz signal as, "a
> pure-sine-wave-tone] with a frequency of 20 KHz and an
> amplitude of 1-watt-per-meter-squared"
>
> One square meter of copper wire squared, a squared meter of modulation
> xfrmr ... ?
Sorry that should be 1 X [10^-6] Watts-per-m^2
http://www.glenbrook.k12.il.us/GBSSC...nd/u11l2b.html
1 X [10^-6] Watts-per-m^2 is about the loudness of a "normal
conversation" according to the above link.
F-------------------king typos!!!!!!!!!!
>
> Your question sounds like one of a high school physics student
> attempting to ask a seemingly logical--yet complex question, and of no
> real world value.
>
> Your ability at obfuscation is only mundane ...
>
> If what you say is true, you have an interest, what is the purpose of
> your question?
My basic question is if I have an AM receiver which receives signals
on a carrier frequency of Fc, is it mathematically-possible for me to
receive a modulator signal -- on that station -- of a frequency higher
than Fc? If not, then why? If not, then how are the submarines which
use ELFs [Extremely Low carrier Frequencies around 3 to 30 Hz] able to
perform voice communications?
I just stretched the question out to astronomical extremes. I have a
habit of doing that.