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tigereyeTO | 4 months ago
…(scroll)…
> The identity for cos(α + β) can be trivially extended to cos(α - β), because subtraction is the same as adding a negative number:
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> From the formula we derived earlier on, the result of this multiplication necessarily indistinguishable from the superposition of two symmetrical sinusoidal transmissions offset from a by ± b, so AM signals take up bandwidth just the same as any other modulation scheme.
mholt|4 months ago
My uncle who's been building his own radios for over 60 years, tried to explain to me how antennas work, and even to him it comes down to "black magic".
I'm told the way they work is not really intuitive, so you just have to math it out.
Maybe I should have gotten an EE degree.
mkipper|4 months ago
So I don't think you're alone feeling this way. Even with a good foundation in the theory and math, I think most people hit a wall with radios at some point. All the people I worked with who intuitively "got" RF stuff had been doing nothing else professionally for over a decade.
lormayna|4 months ago
Source: I almost burnt my PC on simulating a dipole array while studying for the antennas course at the university
ux266478|4 months ago
hedgehog|4 months ago
richiebful1|4 months ago
_whiteCaps_|4 months ago
esseph|4 months ago
But yeah, black magic is right!
kragen|4 months ago
I learned that subtraction was the same as adding a negative number sometime around second grade, and I learned (then forgot) the trigonometric angle-sum identities in tenth grade. And that was even with the handicap of having to attend school in the US.
And, just above the text you're complaining about, he even provides a straightforward geometric proof of the angle-sum identity! So you don't even have to know it to read the article! You just have to know what a cosine is! I learned what a cosine was in eighth grade because I wanted to program a game where objects would fly across the screen at a constant velocity but a varying angle. You can learn it too!
He's not, like, invoking the convolution theorem or anything in those quotes. Although he does get into it a bit.
I think that, if you know the convolution theorem and Euler's formula, things like the production of sum and difference frequencies from the multiplication of sinusoids start to seem obvious rather than sort of random. When I was in high school they seemed sort of random. My uncle had tried to explain Euler's formula to me, along with the Taylor expansions for sine, cosine, and the exponential, but I hadn't really understood, because I didn't have the background knowledge to appreciate them then.
anthomtb|4 months ago
So much EE-related math becomes trivial (or at least not-hard) once you've internalized this formula.
What I am trying to decide is 1) Did I zone out in class when Euler's formula was introduced or 2) Did my secondary school mathematics classes just kind of gloss over it?
I lean towards 2 but unfortunately none of my college classes reintroduced the formula and I ended up making a lot of problems harder than they should have been (I have an EE undergrad).
peterfirefly|4 months ago
The third thing you quote is the result of fairly simply symbol manipulation that requires no new knowledge apart from the original cosine identity and the obvious corollary about subtracting an angle being the same as adding a negated one.
There is zero advanced math there. No complex numbers, no calculus, no limits, no Fourier, no "functions are vectors, too".
Isamu|4 months ago
foobarian|4 months ago
pengaru|4 months ago
andoando|4 months ago