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How kHz, MHz, GHz, THz Signals Are Generated and Fed to an Antenna

  Frequency Signal Generation and Antenna Feeding How kHz, MHz, GHz, THz Signals Are Generated and Fed to an Antenna There are both devices (hardware) and mathematics involved in generating and feeding frequency signals to an antenna. 1. Devices That Generate Frequency Signals Core Idea: An antenna does not create frequency—it radiates whatever signal is fed into it. Main Signal-Generating Devices: Oscillator: Produces a repeating electrical signal (sine wave) Example: Crystal oscillator using Quartz for stable frequency Signal Generator: Adjustable frequency source (kHz to GHz) Used for testing antennas and circuits RF Transmitter: Used in real-world systems (radio, mobile, WiFi) Contains oscillator, amplifier, and modulator Frequency Synthesizer...

Materials Used to Build Antennas

  Antenna Materials Materials Used to Build Antennas The material most commonly used to build antennas is Copper . Sometimes Aluminum is also used. Why Copper is Preferred: Excellent electrical conductivity: Copper allows electric current (and radio-frequency signals) to flow very easily, improving antenna efficiency. Low signal loss: Less energy is lost as heat, so more signal is transmitted or received. Easy to shape and solder: Copper is flexible and easy to work with. Durability: It resists corrosion reasonably well, especially when coated. Why Aluminum is Also Used: Lightweight: Important for large antennas like TV towers. Cost-effective: Cheaper than copper. Good conductivity: Slightly lower than copper but still efficient. Summary: Copper: Best performance (high efficiency) Aluminum: Lighter and cheaper (good for large structures)

Doppler Radar Online Simulator

Advanced Doppler Simulator Doppler Radar Simulator Frequency (GHz) Velocity (km/h) Direction Approaching Receding Calculate 🔊 Play Doppler Sound Simulation Workflow & Mathematics Simulation Workflow User Input: User enters transmit frequency (GHz), target velocity (km/h), and direction. Unit Conversion: Frequency: GHz → Hz Velocity: km/h → m/s Doppler Calculation: System computes Doppler shift using radar equation. Direction Handling: Approaching target → Positive frequency shift Receding target → Negative frequency shift Visualization: Graph updates (frequency vs velocity) Radar animation shows moving target Audio Simulation: Doppler shift modifies sound frequency User hears pitch change Mathematical Model Doppler Frequency Formula (Radar): f d = (2 × v × f) / c f d = Doppler frequency shift (Hz) v = Target velocity (m/s) f = Transmitted frequency (Hz) c = Speed of light = ...

RC Charging & Discharing Online Simulator

  RC Charging & Discharing Simulator V₀: R (Ω): L (H): C (F): Time (s): Start How This Simulator Works This simulator models the behavior of electrical circuits using fundamental equations from circuit theory. You can change values of resistance (R), inductance (L), and capacitance (C) to see how the system responds over time. Workflow of the Simulator User inputs circuit parameters: V₀, R, L, C, and time range The simulator calculates key constants: Damping factor: α = R / (2L) Natural frequency: ω₀ = 1 / √(LC) Based on values, system detects: Underdamped (oscillating) Critically damped Overdamped Voltage v(t), current i(t), and energy are computed at small time steps Graph updates in real-time (oscilloscope style) Mathematical Model 🔹 RC Charging v(t) = V₀ (1 - e -t/RC ) 🔹 RC Discharging v(t) = V₀ e -t/RC 🔹 RLC Circuit Equation L d²q/dt² + R dq/dt + q/...

What is an Oscillator?

  Oscillator Explanation What is an Oscillator? An oscillator is anything that repeats a motion or signal over time. Examples include: A swinging pendulum A vibrating guitar string A repeating electrical signal The Math Behind an Oscillator This is based on Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM) . 1. Basic Equation x(t) = A cos(ωt + φ) x(t) = position at time t A = amplitude ω = angular frequency φ = phase 2. Differential Equation d²x/dt² + ω²x = 0 This means acceleration is proportional to position but in the opposite direction. Spring example: m d²x/dt² + kx = 0 ω = √(k/m) 3. Why Oscillations Happen Energy storage (spring, capacitor) ...

Gold Rush Optimization for Optimal IDFT Size Selection

Gold Rush Optimization for Optimal IDFT Size Selection Gold Rush Optimization (GRO) for Optimal Selection of IDFT Size Gold Rush Optimization (GRO) is a population-based optimization technique inspired by the behavior of gold miners searching for rich gold deposits. In this approach, GRO is used to determine the optimal IDFT size that minimizes the Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR), thereby improving routing accuracy. Step 1: Initialization In the initialization phase, a population of candidate IDFT sizes is randomly generated. Each candidate represents a possible solution. N i (0) = N min + rand(0,1) × (N max − N min ) N i – IDFT size of the i th candidate N min , N max – minimum and maximum IDFT sizes rand(0,1) – uniformly distributed random number Interpretation: Multiple IDFT sizes are randomly selected to form the initial population. Step 2: Fitness Function The objective of the fitness function is to minimize ...

AF Oscillator (Audio Frequency Oscillator)

  AF Oscillator (Audio Frequency Oscillator) What is an AF Oscillator? An AF oscillator (Audio Frequency Oscillator) is an electronic circuit that generates alternating current (AC) signals in the audio frequency range. Frequency range: 20 Hz to 20 kHz (human hearing range) It produces waveforms such as sine waves, square waves, or triangle waves. The oscillator converts DC power into a repeating AC signal using feedback. How It Works A circuit amplifies a signal Part of the output is fed back to the input If feedback is in phase, oscillations continue This is called positive feedback . Mathematical Representation General waveform equation: v(t) = A sin(ωt + φ) A = amplitude ω = 2Ï€f ...

(DSBSC) Free MATLAB alternative for signal analysis

Signal Analyzer Upload CSV, .wav, or .mp4 Use Test Signal CSV Sample Rate (Hz): Generate CSV No Operation FFT (Spectrum) Amplitude Modulation (AM) Double Sideband Supressed Carrier (DSBSC) Parameters Actual Sample Rate (fs): -- Hz By default, the test signal is 5 Hz, and the carrier signal is 50 Hz.

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