
06-30-2007, 06:46 AM
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Re: AM electromagnetic waves: 20 KHz modulation frequency on an astronomically-low carrier frequency On Jun 29, 9:24 pm, Don Bowey <dbo...@comcast.net> wrote:
> On 6/29/07 9:03 PM, in article
> 1183176204.844262.56...@e16g2000pri.googlegroups.c om, "Radium"
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> <gluceg...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > On Jun 29, 8:08 pm, John Smith I <assemblywiz...@gmail.com> wrote:
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> >> The 20 Khz is obviously NOT an audio tone,
>
> > Yes it is. 20 KHz is the highest audible frequency. Humans hear from
> > 20 to 20,000 Hz. No offense but WTF are you thinking??
>
> >> but exists as VLF, what you
> >> are terming "modulation" is actually a mixing of carriers then ... and
> >> the problem with your question ONLY BEGINS there!
>
> > A carrier wave is modulated by the modulator wave. On most AM
> > stations, the modulator wave consists of the voice of someone
> > speaking.
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> > Most AM stations have carrier frequencies in the medium wave band - in
> > the range of 520,000 to 1,160,000 cycles every 1 second.
>
> > In the case I am describing, the modulator wave is a 20 KHz pure sine-
> > wave tone on a carrier frequency of 10^-(1,000,000,000-to-the-
> > power-10^1,000,000,000) nanocycle every 10^1,000,000,000-to-the-
> > power-10^1,000,000,000 giga-eons. Is this scenario mathematically-
> > possible? If not, then why??
>
> No, it's not possible. No planetary system will exist for that span of
> time.
>
> Now will you go away?- Hide quoted text -
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