Indeed, and that resultant wave looks nothing like the sine wave in the example pictures, but is a complex addition of a lot of different sine waves with each different frequencies and amplitudes. That would also happen when Neil Young only hits the snare drum, as each instrument not only produces its base frequency but also harmonics (which have as frequency the integer multiples of the base frequency).If, for example, Neil Young would simultaneously hit the snare drum, sing, strike a cord on his guitar and fart than a lot of pressure waveswould bump into each other, creating a single resultant wave.
Some devices are sensitive for only certain frequencies, and thus filter out only that part of the complex sound wave that contains the respective frequency(ies). In electronics, think of low-pass filters containing a coil or high-pass filters containing a capacitor. In human anatomy, this also happens in the ear.That wave could hit the membrane in my ear or a microphone and it might be transported by radio or it might not be transported. Once the pressure waves are combined into a resultant pressure wave, how can my ear (or my brain) decompose this resultant wave into different instruments? Is the oscillation of my ear's membrane and its movements in time so.. complex and diverse that it this oscillation can carry all the richness of sounds I hear when I play a song or when I am simply on the street? It must be very sensitive to minute differences in oscillation to attain this rich ... ehm understanding or sensing of sound.
It's interesting that people nowadays may first think of sound in digital terms.
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During playback, the movement of a single stylus [needle] tracking the groove is sensed independently eg. by two coils, each mounted diagonally opposite the relevant groove wall.
The photons don't bob up and down. Instead, the electric and magnetic fields vary in a periodic manner that satisfies a certain wave equation that can be derived from Maxwell's equations.But what are electromagnetic waves really like? Do they have an actual physical wave form? Do the photons they are made of bob up and down along a certain path?
Electromagnetic waves do have amplitude. You can measure that amplitude using instruments such as field strength meters, magnetometers, and your cell phone (which translates its measurements of the field strength and quality of reception in relevant frequency bands into a simple visual indicator such as up to five bars).In other words: do electromagnetic waves have an amplitude like waves in water (I am guessing they don't, but I'm not sure why)
That is what seems so strange to me, with a single 'value' at every single point in time, then where is the complexity you hear when you listen to a rock song? I am going to describe a situation. Please tell me if I am right or wrong and why.
If, for example, Neil Young would simultaneously hit the snare drum, sing, strike a cord on his guitar and fart than a lot of pressure waveswould bump into each other, creating a single resultant wave. That wave could hit the membrane in my ear or a microphone and it might be transported by radio or it might not be transported. Once the pressure waves are combined into a resultant pressure wave, how can my ear (or my brain) decompose this resultant wave into different instruments? Is the oscillation of my ear's membrane and its movements in time so.. complex and diverse that it this oscillation can carry all the richness of sounds I hear when I play a song or when I am simply on the street? It must be very sensitive to minute differences in oscillation to attain this rich ... ehm understanding or sensing of sound.
I have been watching an interesting youtube movie on the production of radio waves (here: youtube.com/watch?v=aAcDM2ypBfE). In all discussions of radio waves, they are explained in the same fashion as mechanical waves, like the ones you see in water. But what are electromagnetic waves really like? Do they have an actual physical wave form? Do the photons they are made of bob up and down along a certain path? In other words: do electromagnetic waves have an amplitude like waves in water (I am guessing they don't, but I'm not sure why)
The discrimination in frequencies already occurs in the inner ear, in the cochlea. There is evidence that the (outer) hair cells themselves are "tuned" to a specific frequency, that the arrangement of the hairs of the hair cells discriminates for frequency, and that the basilar membrane, on which the hair cells reside, also discriminates for frequency along its length. There are some 30,000 nerve endings in the cochlea, however, these are not easily mapped 1-1 onto the hair cells, it seems, so it's even more complex (and as of yet poorly understood).The answer to the question is, yes, the complexity of the whole situation is carried to the brain where the sounds are separated, prioritized and sensed both individually and as a whole, in real time. All automatically, apparently hardwired from birth, and yet there is still room for learning more nuance, such as a classical music enthusiast can have while following the second oboist.
There's a correspondence, yes, but it's a bit complicated.And, would it be correct to say that the amplitude of an electromagnetic wave corresponds to the number of photons arriving (particle view) at a location, like the antenna of your cell phone?
And, would it be correct to say that the amplitude of an electromagnetic wave corresponds to the number of photons arriving (particle view) at a location, like the antenna of your cell phone?
Hello Crossbow,
I know, it's a tough subject. I have also read about modulation (AM, FM, ODFM) and I understand how with AM the amplitude of the wave is used to encode information and with FM the frequeny. So I understand that with either modulation type you can encode a binary data stream.
But if that is how the song is transported, then I am still wondering how the song itself is encoded. How are all the tones that happen simultaneously encoded in a binary datastream that is sent/received/read/decoded sequentially? Or am I all wrong and is this not how it works?
Oh, and book suggestions are always welcome of course.
Lot's of good explanations in this thread. But the simplest answer to this question is that the "encoding" method is simple addition. The signal that you care about (the song) is added to the carrier wave. One minor complicating arises in that there are multiple ways two signals can be added together. In AM broadcasting the amplitudes of the two signals are added together. FM is a bit less direct. In FM broadcasting the amplitude of the song is added to the frequency of the carrier.
In both cases you wind up with a broadcast signal that is not a simple single frequency when you're done. It's a multitude of frequencies constantly varying around the frequency of the original carrier frequency.
How many of you remember the audio loops in school classrooms when you were little?
That's the most basic form of radio -- no carrier wave. The speaker level output of a record player was sent to a loop of metal foil stuck to the walls of the classroom, circling the classroom once. A receiver that was like a walkman picked up the electromagnetic audio waves in its own coil and amplified it to headphones.
I've never heard of this. But maybe that's because I'm a relative whippersnapper. Is that a science-lab experiment, or a primitive PA system, or what?
Induction loops were often fitted, but proved to be very unsatisfactory in use, in special schools in the 1960's and 1970's and then fell into disuse. The classroom loop system was replaced by personal fm systems such as our fmGenie radio aid system, Phonak Microlink or Phonic Ear, which are widely used in education today.
You have raised three separate questions in this thread:I have been watching an interesting youtube movie on the production of radio waves (here: youtube.com/watch?v=aAcDM2ypBfE). In all discussions of radio waves, they are explained in the same fashion as mechanical waves, like the ones you see in water. But what are electromagnetic waves really like? Do they have an actual physical wave form? Do the photons they are made of bob up and down along a certain path? In other words: do electromagnetic waves have an amplitude like waves in water (I am guessing they don't, but I'm not sure why)