damped wave उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- Finally, the damped wave is already a form of amplitude modulation ( AM ) and cannot be further modulated for voice with any intelligibility.
- By the 1890s it was realized that damped waves had disadvantages; their energy was spread over a broad frequency modulated with an audio signal to transmit sound.
- When these damped waves were received by a simple detector, the operator would hear an audible buzzing sound that he could transcribe back into alpha-numeric characters.
- The radio signal from a spark gap transmitter consisted of pulses of radio waves ( damped waves ) which repeated at an audio rate, around several hundred per second.
- The classical dissipative acoustic wave propagation equations are confined to the frequency-independent and frequency-squared dependent attenuation, such as damped wave equation and approximate thermoviscous wave equation.
- The Morse code signal of the spark transmitter consisted of pulses of radio waves called damped waves which repeated at an audio rate, so they were audible as a buzz or tone in a receiver's earphones.
- After radio waves were discovered in 1887, the first generation of radio transmitter, the spark gap transmitters, produced strings of " damped waves ", pulses of radio waves which died out to zero quickly.
- These waves are called " damped waves " because the wave tends to " die out " or " dampen out " between discharges of the spark gap as opposed to modern continuous waves ( CW ), which don't die out.
- The first radio transmitter, the spark-gap transmitter, produced a string of damped waves that sounded like a buzz or tone in a radio receiver, so the pulses of radio waves used to transmit Morse code were audible as " beeps " in the receiver.
- There is an inverse relation between the rate of decay ( the time constant ) of a damped wave and its bandwidth; the longer the damped waves take to decay toward zero, the narrower the frequency band the radio signal occupies, so the less it interferes with other transmissions.