DocumentCode
1269154
Title
Current analysis in circuits containing a resistance modulator
Author
Grandy, L.S.
Author_Institution
University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo.
Volume
46
Issue
5
fYear
1927
fDate
5/1/1927 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
426
Lastpage
430
Abstract
The function of a resistance modulator is to produce in an electric circuit a current which is a copy of an exciting impulse such as speech or light waves. The principal example is the carbon granule telephone transmitter. It is desirable that the electric current be an exact copy of the exciting impulse. There is inherent in such a device however, a distorting effect, for the current copy is produced by reason of Ohm´s law and thus is an inverse function of the modulated resistance and not a true copy of it. The amount of distortion arising from this effect depends upon the electrical constants of the modulator and its associated circuit. The study quantitatively analyzes this distorting effect by two methods in a circuit containing a modulator, a battery and a resistance for single frequency modulation and by one of the methods for double frequency modulation. An analysis is also developed for a special test circuit. The study shows that the relation between modulators and circuits is a design problem.
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
A.I.E.E., Journal of the
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0095-9804
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JAIEE.1927.6536273
Filename
6536273
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