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Envelope (waves)

In physics and engineering, the envelope of an oscillating signal is a smooth curve outlining its extremes.[1] The envelope thus generalizes the concept of a constant amplitude into an instantaneous amplitude. The figure illustrates a modulated sine wave varying between an upper envelope and a lower envelope. The envelope function may be a function of time, space, angle, or indeed of any variable.

Envelope for a modulated sine wave.

In beating waves edit

 
A modulated wave resulting from adding two sine waves of identical amplitude and nearly identical wavelength and frequency.

A common situation resulting in an envelope function in both space x and time t is the superposition of two waves of almost the same wavelength and frequency:[2]

 

which uses the trigonometric formula for the addition of two sine waves, and the approximation Δλ ≪ λ:

 

Here the modulation wavelength λmod is given by:[2][3]

 

The modulation wavelength is double that of the envelope itself because each half-wavelength of the modulating cosine wave governs both positive and negative values of the modulated sine wave. Likewise the beat frequency is that of the envelope, twice that of the modulating wave, or 2Δf.[4]

If this wave is a sound wave, the ear hears the frequency associated with f and the amplitude of this sound varies with the beat frequency.[4]

Phase and group velocity edit

 
The red square moves with the phase velocity, and the green circles propagate with the group velocity.

The argument of the sinusoids above apart from a factor 2π are:

 
 

with subscripts C and E referring to the carrier and the envelope. The same amplitude F of the wave results from the same values of ξC and ξE, each of which may itself return to the same value over different but properly related choices of x and t. This invariance means that one can trace these waveforms in space to find the speed of a position of fixed amplitude as it propagates in time; for the argument of the carrier wave to stay the same, the condition is:

 

which shows to keep a constant amplitude the distance Δx is related to the time interval Δt by the so-called phase velocity vp

 

On the other hand, the same considerations show the envelope propagates at the so-called group velocity vg:[5]

 

A more common expression for the group velocity is obtained by introducing the wavevector k:

 

We notice that for small changes Δλ, the magnitude of the corresponding small change in wavevector, say Δk, is:

 

so the group velocity can be rewritten as:

 

where ω is the frequency in radians/s: ω = 2πf. In all media, frequency and wavevector are related by a dispersion relation, ω = ω(k), and the group velocity can be written:

 
 
Dispersion relation ω=ω(k) for some waves corresponding to lattice vibrations in GaAs.[6]

In a medium such as classical vacuum the dispersion relation for electromagnetic waves is:

 

where c0 is the speed of light in classical vacuum. For this case, the phase and group velocities both are c0.

In so-called dispersive media the dispersion relation can be a complicated function of wavevector, and the phase and group velocities are not the same. For example, for several types of waves exhibited by atomic vibrations (phonons) in GaAs, the dispersion relations are shown in the figure for various directions of wavevector k. In the general case, the phase and group velocities may have different directions.[7]

In function approximation edit

 
Electron probabilities in lowest two quantum states of a 160Å GaAs quantum well in a GaAs-GaAlAs heterostructure as calculated from envelope functions.[8]

In condensed matter physics an energy eigenfunction for a mobile charge carrier in a crystal can be expressed as a Bloch wave:

 

where n is the index for the band (for example, conduction or valence band) r is a spatial location, and k is a wavevector. The exponential is a sinusoidally varying function corresponding to a slowly varying envelope modulating the rapidly varying part of the wavefunction un,k describing the behavior of the wavefunction close to the cores of the atoms of the lattice. The envelope is restricted to k-values within a range limited by the Brillouin zone of the crystal, and that limits how rapidly it can vary with location r.

In determining the behavior of the carriers using quantum mechanics, the envelope approximation usually is used in which the Schrödinger equation is simplified to refer only to the behavior of the envelope, and boundary conditions are applied to the envelope function directly, rather than to the complete wavefunction.[9] For example, the wavefunction of a carrier trapped near an impurity is governed by an envelope function F that governs a superposition of Bloch functions:

 

where the Fourier components of the envelope F(k) are found from the approximate Schrödinger equation.[10] In some applications, the periodic part uk is replaced by its value near the band edge, say k=k0, and then:[9]

 

In diffraction patterns edit

 
Diffraction pattern of a double slit has a single-slit envelope.

Diffraction patterns from multiple slits have envelopes determined by the single slit diffraction pattern. For a single slit the pattern is given by:[11]

 

where α is the diffraction angle, d is the slit width, and λ is the wavelength. For multiple slits, the pattern is [11]

 

where q is the number of slits, and g is the grating constant. The first factor, the single-slit result I1, modulates the more rapidly varying second factor that depends upon the number of slits and their spacing.

Estimation edit

An envelope detector is an electronic circuit that extracts the envelope from a signal.

In digital signal processing, the envelope may be estimated employing the Hilbert transform or a moving RMS amplitude.[12]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ C. Richard Johnson, Jr; William A. Sethares; Andrew G. Klein (2011). "Figure C.1: The envelope of a function outlines its extremes in a smooth manner". Software Receiver Design: Build Your Own Digital Communication System in Five Easy Steps. Cambridge University Press. p. 417. ISBN 978-0521189446.
  2. ^ a b Blair Kinsman (2002). Wind Waves: Their Generation and Propagation on the Ocean Surface (Reprint of Prentice-Hall 1965 ed.). Courier Dover Publications. p. 186. ISBN 0486495116.
  3. ^ Mark W. Denny (1993). Air and Water: The Biology and Physics of Life's Media. Princeton University Press. pp. 289. ISBN 0691025185.
  4. ^ a b Paul Allen Tipler; Gene Mosca (2008). Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Volume 1 (6th ed.). Macmillan. p. 538. ISBN 978-1429201247.
  5. ^ Peter W. Milonni; Joseph H. Eberly (2010). "§8.3 Group velocity". Laser Physics (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. p. 336. ISBN 978-0470387719.
  6. ^ Peter Y. Yu; Manuel Cardona (2010). "Fig. 3.2: Phonon dispersion curves in GaAs along high-symmetry axes". Fundamentals of Semiconductors: Physics and Materials Properties (4th ed.). Springer. p. 111. ISBN 978-3642007095.
  7. ^ V. Cerveny; Vlastislav Červený (2005). "§2.2.9 Relation between the phase and group velocity vectors". Seismic Ray Theory. Cambridge University Press. p. 35. ISBN 0521018226.
  8. ^ G Bastard; JA Brum; R Ferreira (1991). "Figure 10 in Electronic States in Semiconductor Heterostructures". In Henry Ehrenreich; David Turnbull (eds.). Solid state physics: Semiconductor Heterostructures and Nanostructures. p. 259. ISBN 0126077444.
  9. ^ a b Christian Schüller (2006). "§2.4.1 Envelope function approximation (EFA)". Inelastic Light Scattering of Semiconductor Nanostructures: Fundamentals And Recent Advances. Springer. p. 22. ISBN 3540365257.
  10. ^ For example, see Marco Fanciulli (2009). "§1.1 Envelope function approximation". Electron Spin Resonance and Related Phenomena in Low-Dimensional Structures. Springer. pp. 224 ff. ISBN 978-3540793649.
  11. ^ a b Kordt Griepenkerl (2002). "Intensity distribution for diffraction by a slit and Intensity pattern for diffraction by a grating". In John W Harris; Walter Benenson; Horst Stöcker; Holger Lutz (eds.). Handbook of physics. Springer. pp. 306 ff. ISBN 0387952691.
  12. ^ "Envelope Extraction - MATLAB & Simulink". MathWorks. 2021-09-02. Retrieved 2021-11-16.

This article incorporates material from the Citizendium article "Envelope function", which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License but not under the GFDL.

envelope, waves, physics, engineering, envelope, oscillating, signal, smooth, curve, outlining, extremes, envelope, thus, generalizes, concept, constant, amplitude, into, instantaneous, amplitude, figure, illustrates, modulated, sine, wave, varying, between, u. In physics and engineering the envelope of an oscillating signal is a smooth curve outlining its extremes 1 The envelope thus generalizes the concept of a constant amplitude into an instantaneous amplitude The figure illustrates a modulated sine wave varying between an upper envelope and a lower envelope The envelope function may be a function of time space angle or indeed of any variable Envelope for a modulated sine wave Contents 1 In beating waves 1 1 Phase and group velocity 2 In function approximation 3 In diffraction patterns 4 Estimation 5 See also 6 ReferencesIn beating waves edit nbsp A modulated wave resulting from adding two sine waves of identical amplitude and nearly identical wavelength and frequency A common situation resulting in an envelope function in both space x and time t is the superposition of two waves of almost the same wavelength and frequency 2 F x t sin 2 p x l D l f D f t sin 2 p x l D l f D f t 2 cos 2 p x l m o d D f t sin 2 p x l f t displaystyle begin aligned F x t amp sin left 2 pi left frac x lambda Delta lambda f Delta f t right right sin left 2 pi left frac x lambda Delta lambda f Delta f t right right 6pt amp approx 2 cos left 2 pi left frac x lambda rm mod Delta f t right right sin left 2 pi left frac x lambda f t right right end aligned nbsp which uses the trigonometric formula for the addition of two sine waves and the approximation Dl l 1 l D l 1 l 1 1 D l l 1 l D l l 2 displaystyle frac 1 lambda pm Delta lambda frac 1 lambda frac 1 1 pm Delta lambda lambda approx frac 1 lambda mp frac Delta lambda lambda 2 nbsp Here the modulation wavelength lmod is given by 2 3 l m o d l 2 D l displaystyle lambda rm mod frac lambda 2 Delta lambda nbsp The modulation wavelength is double that of the envelope itself because each half wavelength of the modulating cosine wave governs both positive and negative values of the modulated sine wave Likewise the beat frequency is that of the envelope twice that of the modulating wave or 2Df 4 If this wave is a sound wave the ear hears the frequency associated with f and the amplitude of this sound varies with the beat frequency 4 Phase and group velocity edit See also Wave Phase velocity and group velocity nbsp The red square moves with the phase velocity and the green circles propagate with the group velocity The argument of the sinusoids above apart from a factor 2p are 3 C x l f t displaystyle xi C left frac x lambda f t right nbsp 3 E x l m o d D f t displaystyle xi E left frac x lambda rm mod Delta f t right nbsp with subscripts C and E referring to the carrier and the envelope The same amplitude F of the wave results from the same values of 3C and 3E each of which may itself return to the same value over different but properly related choices of x and t This invariance means that one can trace these waveforms in space to find the speed of a position of fixed amplitude as it propagates in time for the argument of the carrier wave to stay the same the condition is x l f t x D x l f t D t displaystyle left frac x lambda f t right left frac x Delta x lambda f t Delta t right nbsp which shows to keep a constant amplitude the distance Dx is related to the time interval Dt by the so called phase velocity vp v p D x D t l f displaystyle v rm p frac Delta x Delta t lambda f nbsp On the other hand the same considerations show the envelope propagates at the so called group velocity vg 5 v g D x D t l m o d D f l 2 D f D l displaystyle v rm g frac Delta x Delta t lambda rm mod Delta f lambda 2 frac Delta f Delta lambda nbsp A more common expression for the group velocity is obtained by introducing the wavevector k k 2 p l displaystyle k frac 2 pi lambda nbsp We notice that for small changes Dl the magnitude of the corresponding small change in wavevector say Dk is D k d k d l D l 2 p D l l 2 displaystyle Delta k left frac dk d lambda right Delta lambda 2 pi frac Delta lambda lambda 2 nbsp so the group velocity can be rewritten as v g 2 p D f D k D w D k displaystyle v rm g frac 2 pi Delta f Delta k frac Delta omega Delta k nbsp where w is the frequency in radians s w 2p f In all media frequency and wavevector are related by a dispersion relation w w k and the group velocity can be written v g d w k d k displaystyle v rm g frac d omega k dk nbsp nbsp Dispersion relation w w k for some waves corresponding to lattice vibrations in GaAs 6 In a medium such as classical vacuum the dispersion relation for electromagnetic waves is w c 0 k displaystyle omega c 0 k nbsp where c0 is the speed of light in classical vacuum For this case the phase and group velocities both are c0 In so called dispersive media the dispersion relation can be a complicated function of wavevector and the phase and group velocities are not the same For example for several types of waves exhibited by atomic vibrations phonons in GaAs the dispersion relations are shown in the figure for various directions of wavevector k In the general case the phase and group velocities may have different directions 7 In function approximation editSee also k p perturbation theory nbsp Electron probabilities in lowest two quantum states of a 160A GaAs quantum well in a GaAs GaAlAs heterostructure as calculated from envelope functions 8 In condensed matter physics an energy eigenfunction for a mobile charge carrier in a crystal can be expressed as a Bloch wave ps n k r e i k r u n k r displaystyle psi n mathbf k mathbf r e i mathbf k cdot mathbf r u n mathbf k mathbf r nbsp where n is the index for the band for example conduction or valence band r is a spatial location and k is a wavevector The exponential is a sinusoidally varying function corresponding to a slowly varying envelope modulating the rapidly varying part of the wavefunction un k describing the behavior of the wavefunction close to the cores of the atoms of the lattice The envelope is restricted to k values within a range limited by the Brillouin zone of the crystal and that limits how rapidly it can vary with location r In determining the behavior of the carriers using quantum mechanics the envelope approximation usually is used in which the Schrodinger equation is simplified to refer only to the behavior of the envelope and boundary conditions are applied to the envelope function directly rather than to the complete wavefunction 9 For example the wavefunction of a carrier trapped near an impurity is governed by an envelope function F that governs a superposition of Bloch functions ps r k F k e i k r u k r displaystyle psi mathbf r sum mathbf k F mathbf k e i mathbf k cdot r u mathbf k mathbf r nbsp where the Fourier components of the envelope F k are found from the approximate Schrodinger equation 10 In some applications the periodic part uk is replaced by its value near the band edge say k k0 and then 9 ps r k F k e i k r u k k 0 r F r u k k 0 r displaystyle psi mathbf r approx left sum mathbf k F mathbf k e i mathbf k cdot r right u mathbf k mathbf k 0 mathbf r F mathbf r u mathbf k mathbf k 0 mathbf r nbsp In diffraction patterns edit nbsp Diffraction pattern of a double slit has a single slit envelope Diffraction patterns from multiple slits have envelopes determined by the single slit diffraction pattern For a single slit the pattern is given by 11 I 1 I 0 sin 2 p d sin a l p d sin a l 2 displaystyle I 1 I 0 sin 2 left frac pi d sin alpha lambda right left frac pi d sin alpha lambda right 2 nbsp where a is the diffraction angle d is the slit width and l is the wavelength For multiple slits the pattern is 11 I q I 1 sin 2 q p g sin a l sin 2 p g sin a l displaystyle I q I 1 sin 2 left frac q pi g sin alpha lambda right sin 2 left frac pi g sin alpha lambda right nbsp where q is the number of slits and g is the grating constant The first factor the single slit result I1 modulates the more rapidly varying second factor that depends upon the number of slits and their spacing Estimation editAn envelope detector is an electronic circuit that extracts the envelope from a signal In digital signal processing the envelope may be estimated employing the Hilbert transform or a moving RMS amplitude 12 See also editAnalytic signal Complex envelope baseband Empirical mode decomposition Envelope mathematics Envelope tracking Instantaneous phase Modulation Mathematics of oscillation Peak envelope power Spectral envelopeReferences edit C Richard Johnson Jr William A Sethares Andrew G Klein 2011 Figure C 1 The envelope of a function outlines its extremes in a smooth manner Software Receiver Design Build Your Own Digital Communication System in Five Easy Steps Cambridge University Press p 417 ISBN 978 0521189446 a b Blair Kinsman 2002 Wind Waves Their Generation and Propagation on the Ocean Surface Reprint of Prentice Hall 1965 ed Courier Dover Publications p 186 ISBN 0486495116 Mark W Denny 1993 Air and Water The Biology and Physics of Life s Media Princeton University Press pp 289 ISBN 0691025185 a b Paul Allen Tipler Gene Mosca 2008 Physics for Scientists and Engineers Volume 1 6th ed Macmillan p 538 ISBN 978 1429201247 Peter W Milonni Joseph H Eberly 2010 8 3 Group velocity Laser Physics 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons p 336 ISBN 978 0470387719 Peter Y Yu Manuel Cardona 2010 Fig 3 2 Phonon dispersion curves in GaAs along high symmetry axes Fundamentals of Semiconductors Physics and Materials Properties 4th ed Springer p 111 ISBN 978 3642007095 V Cerveny Vlastislav Cerveny 2005 2 2 9 Relation between the phase and group velocity vectors Seismic Ray Theory Cambridge University Press p 35 ISBN 0521018226 G Bastard JA Brum R Ferreira 1991 Figure 10 in Electronic States in Semiconductor Heterostructures In Henry Ehrenreich David Turnbull eds Solid state physics Semiconductor Heterostructures and Nanostructures p 259 ISBN 0126077444 a b Christian Schuller 2006 2 4 1 Envelope function approximation EFA Inelastic Light Scattering of Semiconductor Nanostructures Fundamentals And Recent Advances Springer p 22 ISBN 3540365257 For example see Marco Fanciulli 2009 1 1 Envelope function approximation Electron Spin Resonance and Related Phenomena in Low Dimensional Structures Springer pp 224 ff ISBN 978 3540793649 a b Kordt Griepenkerl 2002 Intensity distribution for diffraction by a slit and Intensity pattern for diffraction by a grating In John W Harris Walter Benenson Horst Stocker Holger Lutz eds Handbook of physics Springer pp 306 ff ISBN 0387952691 Envelope Extraction MATLAB amp Simulink MathWorks 2021 09 02 Retrieved 2021 11 16 This article incorporates material from the Citizendium article Envelope function which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3 0 Unported License but not under the GFDL Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Envelope waves amp oldid 1193829905, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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