Damped wave

A damped wave is a wave whose amplitude of oscillation decreases with time, eventually going to zero, an exponentially decaying sinusoidal wave. This term also refers to an early method of radio transmission produced by the first radio transmitters, spark gap transmitters, which consisted of a series of damped radio waves. Information was carried on this signal by telegraphy, turning the transmitter on and off (on-off keying) to send messages in Morse code. Damped waves were the first practical means of radio communication, used during the wireless telegraphy era which ended around 1920. In radio engineering it is now generally referred to as "Class B" emission. However, such transmissions have a wide bandwidth and generate electrical "noise" (electromagnetic interference) which interferes with other radio transmissions.

Because of their potential to cause interference and their resulting wasteful use of radio spectrum resources, there is an international prohibition against the use of class B damped wave radio emissions (except in the USA under Part 15: "§15.521 Technical requirements applicable to all UWB devices. (i) The prohibition in §2.201(f) and 15.5(d) of this chapter against Class B (damped wave) emissions does not apply to UWB devices operating under this subpart."), established by the International Telecommunications Union in 1938.[1][2] However the definition of "damped waves" in these regulations is unclear when applied to modern technology, and recently there have been moves to amend this prohibition to exempt emerging radio technologies such as ultra-wideband transmission systems.[3]

An ideal damped wave is an exponentially decreasing sinusoid; an oscillating sine (or cosine) wave in which the peak amplitude decreases from an initial maximum toward zero at an exponential rate

where

is time in seconds
is the peak amplitude of the wave.
is the angular frequency of the oscillations in radians per second
is the frequency of the oscillations in hertz
is the damping factor of the wave
is the time constant of the wave in seconds; the time for the peak amplitude to decay to of its initial value
A series of damped waves, such as would be radiated by a spark-gap transmitter. In this graph, the vertical axis is the amplitude of the wave, in units such as voltage or electric field strength; the horizontal axis is time.

See also

References

  1. Siwiak, Kazimierz; Debra McKeown (2004). Ultra-wideband radio technology. USA: John Wiley and Sons. p. 15. ISBN 0-470-85931-8.
  2. individual nations enforce this prohibition in their communication laws. In the United States this is implemented in regulations of the Federal Communications Commission: "Title 47, Chapter 1, Subchapter A, Part 2, Subpart C - Emissions, footnote f". Code of Federal Regulations. United States printing office website. December 14, 1984. Retrieved February 14, 2018.
  3. "Notice of Inquiry: Revision of Part 15 of the Commission's Rules Regarding Ultra-Wideband Transmission Systems" (PDF). ET Docket No. 98-153. US Federal Communications Commission. August 20, 1998. Retrieved 2010-03-04.
  • Sparks Telegraph Key Review A complete listing with photos of damped wave telegraph keys (spark keys) by manufacturer.
  • 47cfr2.201 FCC rules where "Type B damped wave emissions" are forbidden.
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