Added: 3 years ago
From: mittechtv
Views: 18,682
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  • challange this just in. take for instance a vacume tube fill it with argon neon or what have you place inside a gap for electrisity to spark arcross after you aply energy from a microwave emmiter. is there any usable electrisity? now within the same vacume tube have intense UV light LED will for sevral, now you will have a tube that is condutive altoghther because of the UV light.

  • This might explain why tv reception is in and out as I move around the living room.

  • Bummer, I was waiting to see hand start smoking.

  • 2.4 GHz?

  • @wdowa94 The audio signal is probably modulated onto the microwave carrier, that's how it can be heard...

  • I'd love to see a perfectly generated 3D interactive picture of this wave interference effect (and by 3D I don't mean 3D animation of a 2D picture, but a three dimentional depiction of this effect)

  • am ende sieht man heisenbergsche unschärferelation

  • yay triangle waves are awesome

  • THATS SO COOL!

  • It's like the slit experiment you do in high school. Shine a light at paper (or whatever) that has to narrow slits cut into it and the light that shines through and onto the wall beyond will form bands of light and dark. The two sources of light from the slits are interfering constructively and destructively. This is why your tv reception gets cruddy when you move around the room if the signal isn't strong enough to be compensated from other directions... signal bends around you...

  • I don't think so

  • Ok. Easy to assert?

  • @terryphi:constructive and destructive interferences

  • this reminds me of microphone to speaker-amplifier feedback situations, is it analogous?

  • nice job!, when you put metal piece, there are dispersion of waves from the right antenna?

  • i think they are just being warped more, not dispersed. maybe

  • sound + sound = no sound

    mouvment + mouvment = no mouvment

    onde + onde = nothing if we emet the same hirtz

  • actually, sound + inverted sound = no sound.

  • @KaslarProductions Actually that is not true.

    Although it is the case that one may cancel a signal to a speaker with an inverted wave form, in practice sound does not behave like that.

    I worked with a sound engineer who told me that anti sound is Not used to cancel sound very often, basically if you pump a lot of energy into a sound system, adding anti sound adds energy too.. it leaks and can only make a small quiet zone, usually all that sound will be even louder somewhere near by.

  • @marsCubed Thank for the info.... I learn something everyday

  • is the recieved signal being amplified beyond the broadcast level?

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