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Heterodyne

A heterodyne is a signal frequency that is created by combining or mixing two other frequencies using a signal processing technique called heterodyning, which was invented by Canadian inventor-engineer Reginald Fessenden.[1][2][3] Heterodyning is used to shift signals from one frequency range into another, and is also involved in the processes of modulation and demodulation.[2][4] The two input frequencies are combined in a nonlinear signal-processing device such as a vacuum tube, transistor, or diode, usually called a mixer.[2]

Frequency mixer symbol used in schematic diagrams

In the most common application, two signals at frequencies f1 and f2 are mixed, creating two new signals, one at the sum of the two frequencies f1 + f2, and the other at the difference between the two frequencies f1 − f2.[3] The new signal frequencies are called heterodynes. Typically, only one of the heterodynes is required and the other signal is filtered out of the output of the mixer. Heterodyne frequencies are related to the phenomenon of "beats" in acoustics.[2][5][6]

A major application of the heterodyne process is in the superheterodyne radio receiver circuit, which is used in virtually all modern radio receivers.

History edit

 
Fessenden's heterodyne radio receiver circuit. The incoming radio frequency and local oscillator frequency mix in the crystal diode detector.

In 1901, Reginald Fessenden demonstrated a direct-conversion heterodyne receiver or beat receiver as a method of making continuous wave radiotelegraphy signals audible.[7] Fessenden's receiver did not see much application because of its local oscillator's stability problem. A stable yet inexpensive local oscillator was not available until Lee de Forest invented the triode vacuum tube oscillator.[8] In a 1905 patent, Fessenden stated that the frequency stability of his local oscillator was one part per thousand.[9]

In radio telegraphy, the characters of text messages are translated into the short duration dots and long duration dashes of Morse code that are broadcast as radio signals. Radio telegraphy was much like ordinary telegraphy. One of the problems was building high power transmitters with the technology of the day. Early transmitters were spark gap transmitters. A mechanical device would make sparks at a fixed but audible rate; the sparks would put energy into a resonant circuit that would then ring at the desired transmission frequency (which might be 100 kHz). This ringing would quickly decay, so the output of the transmitter would be a succession of damped waves. When these damped waves were received by a simple detector, the operator would hear an audible buzzing sound that could be transcribed back into alpha-numeric characters.

With the development of the arc converter radio transmitter in 1904, continuous wave (CW) modulation began to be used for radiotelegraphy. CW Morse code signals are not amplitude modulated, but rather consist of bursts of sinusoidal carrier frequency. When CW signals are received by an AM receiver, the operator does not hear a sound. The direct-conversion (heterodyne) detector was invented to make continuous wave radio-frequency signals audible.[10]

The "heterodyne" or "beat" receiver has a local oscillator that produces a radio signal adjusted to be close in frequency to the incoming signal being received. When the two signals are mixed, a "beat" frequency equal to the difference between the two frequencies is created. Adjusting the local oscillator frequency correctly puts the beat frequency in the audio range, where it can be heard as a tone in the receiver's earphones whenever the transmitter signal is present. Thus the Morse code "dots" and "dashes" are audible as beeping sounds. This technique is still used in radio telegraphy, the local oscillator now being called the beat frequency oscillator or BFO. Fessenden coined the word heterodyne from the Greek roots hetero- "different", and dyn- "power" (cf. δύναμις or dunamis).[11]

Superheterodyne receiver edit

 
Block diagram of a typical superheterodyne receiver. Red parts are those that handle the incoming radio frequency (RF) signal; green are parts that operate at the intermediate frequency (IF), while blue parts operate at the modulation (audio) frequency.

An important and widely used application of the heterodyne technique is in the superheterodyne receiver (superhet). In the typical superhet, the incoming radio frequency signal from the antenna is mixed (heterodyned) with a signal from a local oscillator (LO) to produce a lower fixed frequency signal called the intermediate frequency (IF) signal. The IF signal is amplified and filtered and then applied to a detector that extracts the audio signal; the audio is ultimately sent to the receiver's loudspeaker.

The superheterodyne receiver has several advantages over previous receiver designs. One advantage is easier tuning; only the RF filter and the LO are tuned by the operator; the fixed-frequency IF is tuned ("aligned") at the factory and is not adjusted. In older designs such as the tuned radio frequency receiver (TRF), all of the receiver stages had to be simultaneously tuned. In addition, since the IF filters are fixed-tuned, the receiver's selectivity is the same across the receiver's entire frequency band. Another advantage is that the IF signal can be at a much lower frequency than the incoming radio signal, and that allows each stage of the IF amplifier to provide more gain. To first order, an amplifying device has a fixed gain-bandwidth product. If the device has a gain-bandwidth product of 60 MHz, then it can provide a voltage gain of 3 at an RF of 20 MHz or a voltage gain of 30 at an IF of 2 MHz. At a lower IF, it would take fewer gain devices to achieve the same gain. The regenerative radio receiver obtained more gain out of one gain device by using positive feedback, but it required careful adjustment by the operator; that adjustment also changed the selectivity of the regenerative receiver. The superheterodyne provides a large, stable gain and constant selectivity without troublesome adjustment.

The superior superheterodyne system replaced the earlier TRF and regenerative receiver designs, and since the 1930s most commercial radio receivers have been superheterodynes.

Applications edit

Heterodyning, also called frequency conversion, is used very widely in communications engineering to generate new frequencies and move information from one frequency channel to another. Besides its use in the superheterodyne circuit found in almost all radio and television receivers, it is used in radio transmitters, modems, satellite communications and set-top boxes, radar, radio telescopes, telemetry systems, cell phones, cable television converter boxes and headends, microwave relays, metal detectors, atomic clocks, and military electronic countermeasure (jamming) systems.

Up and down converters edit

In large scale telecommunication networks such as telephone network trunks, microwave relay networks, cable television systems, and communication satellite links, large bandwidth capacity links are shared by many individual communication channels by using heterodyning to move the frequency of the individual signals up to different frequencies, which share the channel. This is called frequency division multiplexing (FDM).

For example, a coaxial cable used by a cable television system can carry 500 television channels at the same time because each one is given a different frequency, so they do not interfere with one another. At the cable source or headend, electronic upconverters convert each incoming television channel to a new, higher frequency. They do this by mixing the television signal frequency, fCH with a local oscillator at a much higher frequency fLO, creating a heterodyne at the sum fCH + fLO, which is added to the cable. At the consumer's home, the cable set top box has a downconverter that mixes the incoming signal at frequency fCH + fLO with the same local oscillator frequency fLO creating the difference heterodyne frequency, converting the television channel back to its original frequency: (fCH + fLO) − fLOfCH. Each channel is moved to a different higher frequency. The original lower basic frequency of the signal is called the baseband, while the higher channel it is moved to is called the passband.

Analog videotape recording edit

Many analog videotape systems rely on a downconverted color subcarrier to record color information in their limited bandwidth. These systems are referred to as "heterodyne systems" or "color-under systems". For instance, for NTSC video systems, the VHS (and S-VHS) recording system converts the color subcarrier from the NTSC standard 3.58 MHz to ~629 kHz.[12] PAL VHS color subcarrier is similarly downconverted (but from 4.43 MHz). The now-obsolete 3/4" U-matic systems use a heterodyned ~688 kHz subcarrier for NTSC recordings (as does Sony's Betamax, which is at its basis a 1/2″ consumer version of U-matic), while PAL U-matic decks came in two mutually incompatible varieties, with different subcarrier frequencies, known as Hi-Band and Low-Band. Other videotape formats with heterodyne color systems include Video-8 and Hi8.[13]

The heterodyne system in these cases is used to convert quadrature phase-encoded and amplitude modulated sine waves from the broadcast frequencies to frequencies recordable in less than 1 MHz bandwidth. On playback, the recorded color information is heterodyned back to the standard subcarrier frequencies for display on televisions and for interchange with other standard video equipment.

Some U-matic (3/4″) decks feature 7-pin mini-DIN connectors to allow dubbing of tapes without conversion, as do some industrial VHS, S-VHS, and Hi8 recorders.

Music synthesis edit

The theremin, an electronic musical instrument, traditionally uses the heterodyne principle to produce a variable audio frequency in response to the movement of the musician's hands in the vicinity of one or more antennae, which act as capacitor plates. The output of a fixed radio frequency oscillator is mixed with that of an oscillator whose frequency is affected by the variable capacitance between the antenna and the musician's hand as it is moved near the pitch control antenna. The difference between the two oscillator frequencies produces a tone in the audio range.

The ring modulator is a type of frequency mixer incorporated into some synthesizers or used as a stand-alone audio effect.

Optical heterodyning edit

Optical heterodyne detection (an area of active research) is an extension of the heterodyning technique to higher (visible) frequencies. Guerra[14] (1995) first published the results of what he called a "form of optical heterodyning" in which light patterned by a 50 nm pitch grating illuminated a second grating of pitch 50 nm, with the gratings rotated with respect to each other by the angular amount needed to achieve magnification. Although the illuminating wavelength was 650 nm, the 50 nm grating was easily resolved. This showed a nearly 5-fold improvement over the Abbe resolution limit of 232 nm that should have been the smallest obtained for the numerical aperture and wavelength used. This super-resolution microscopic imaging through optical heterodyning later came to be know by many as "structured illumination microscopy".

In addition to super-resolution optical microscopy, optical heterodyning could greatly improve optical modulators, increasing the density of information carried by optical fibers. It is also being applied in the creation of more accurate atomic clocks based on directly measuring the frequency of a laser beam. See NIST subtopic 9.07.9-4.R for a description of research on one system to do this.[15][16]

Since optical frequencies are far beyond the manipulation capacity of any feasible electronic circuit, all visible frequency photon detectors are inherently energy detectors not oscillating electric field detectors. However, since energy detection is inherently "square-law" detection, it intrinsically mixes any optical frequencies present on the detector. Thus, sensitive detection of specific optical frequencies necessitates optical heterodyne detection, in which two different (close by) wavelengths of light illuminate the detector so that the oscillating electrical output corresponds to the difference between their frequencies. This allows extremely narrow band detection (much narrower than any possible color filter can achieve) as well as precision measurements of phase and frequency of a light signal relative to a reference light source, as in a laser Doppler vibrometer.

This phase sensitive detection has been applied for Doppler measurements of wind speed, and imaging through dense media. The high sensitivity against background light is especially useful for lidar.

In optical Kerr effect (OKE) spectroscopy, optical heterodyning of the OKE signal and a small part of the probe signal produces a mixed signal consisting of probe, heterodyne OKE-probe and homodyne OKE signal. The probe and homodyne OKE signals can be filtered out, leaving the heterodyne frequency signal for detection.

Heterodyne detection is often used in interferometry but usually confined to single point detection rather than widefield interferometry, however, widefield heterodyne interferometry is possible using a special camera.[17] Using this technique which a reference signal extracted from a single pixel it is possible to build a highly stable widefield heterodyne interferometer by removing the piston phase component caused by microphonics or vibrations of the optical components or object.[18]

Mathematical principle edit

Heterodyning is based on the trigonometric identity:

 

The product on the left hand side represents the multiplication ("mixing") of a sine wave with another sine wave (both produced by cosine functions). The right hand side shows that the resulting signal is the difference of two sinusoidal terms, one at the sum of the two original frequencies, and one at the difference, which can be dealt with separately, since their (large) frequency difference makes it easy to cleanly filter out one signal's frequency, while leaving the other signal unchanged.

Using this trigonometric identity, the result of multiplying two cosine wave signals   and   at different frequencies   and   can be calculated:

 

The result is the sum of two sinusoidal signals, one at the sum f1 + f2 and one at the difference f1 − f2 of the original frequencies.

Mixer edit

The two signals are combined in a device called a mixer. As seen in the previous section, an ideal mixer would be a device that multiplies the two signals. Some widely used mixer circuits, such as the Gilbert cell, operate in this way, but they are limited to lower frequencies. However, any nonlinear electronic component also multiplies signals applied to it, producing heterodyne frequencies in its output—so a variety of nonlinear components serve as mixers. A nonlinear component is one in which the output current or voltage is a nonlinear function of its input. Most circuit elements in communications circuits are designed to be linear. This means they obey the superposition principle; if   is the output of a linear element with an input of  :

 

So if two sine wave signals at frequencies f1 and f2 are applied to a linear device, the output is simply the sum of the outputs when the two signals are applied separately with no product terms. Thus, the function   must be nonlinear to create mixer products. A perfect multiplier only produces mixer products at the sum and difference frequencies (f1 ± f2), but more general nonlinear functions produce higher order mixer products: nf1 + mf2 for integers n and m. Some mixer designs, such as double-balanced mixers, suppress some high order undesired products, while other designs, such as harmonic mixers exploit high order differences.

Examples of nonlinear components that are used as mixers are vacuum tubes and transistors biased near cutoff (class C), and diodes. Ferromagnetic core inductors driven into saturation can also be used at lower frequencies. In nonlinear optics, crystals that have nonlinear characteristics are used to mix laser light beams to create optical heterodyne frequencies.

Output of a mixer edit

To demonstrate mathematically how a nonlinear component can multiply signals and generate heterodyne frequencies, the nonlinear function   can be expanded in a power series (MacLaurin series):

 

To simplify the math, the higher order terms above α2 are indicated by an ellipsis ( ) and only the first terms are shown. Applying the two sine waves at frequencies ω1 = 2πf1 and ω2 = 2πf2 to this device:

 
 
 

It can be seen that the second term above contains a product of the two sine waves. Simplifying with trigonometric identities:

 

Which leaves the two heterodyne frequencies as two among the many terms:

 

along with many other terms not shown.

Among many other frequencies, the output contains sinusoidal terms with frequencies at the sum ω1 + ω2 and difference ω1 − ω2 of the two original frequencies. It also contains terms at the original frequencies and terms at multiples of the original frequencies 2 ω1 , 2 ω2 , 3 ω1 , 3 ω2 , etc., called harmonics. It also contains much more complicated terms at frequencies of M ω1 + N ω2 , called intermodulation products. These unwanted frequencies, along with the unwanted heterodyne frequency, must be removed from the mixer output by an electronic filter, to leave the desired heterodyne frequency.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Christopher E. Cooper (January 2001). Physics. Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. pp. 25–. ISBN 978-1-57958-358-3.
  2. ^ a b c d United States Bureau of Naval Personnel (1973). Basic Electronics. USA: Courier Dover. p. 338. ISBN 978-0-486-21076-6.
  3. ^ a b Graf, Rudolf F. (1999). Modern dictionary of electronics (7th ed.). USA: Newnes. p. 344. ISBN 978-0-7506-9866-5.
  4. ^ Horowitz, Paul; Hill, Winfield (1989). The Art of Electronics (2nd ed.). London: Cambridge University Press. pp. 885, 897. ISBN 978-0-521-37095-0.
  5. ^ Strange, Allen; Strange, Patricia (2003). The Contemporary Violin: Extended Performance Techniques. Scarecrow Press. p. 216. ISBN 978-0-520-22409-4.
  6. ^ Ingard, Uno (2008). Acoustics. Jones and Bartlett. pp. 18–21. ISBN 978-1-934015-08-7.
  7. ^ Discussion of A History of Some Foundations of Modern Radio-Electronic Technology, Comments by Lloyd Espenschied, Proceedings of the IRE, July, 1959 (Vol. 47, No. 7), pp. 1254, 1256. Critique. ". . . the roots of our modern technology trace back generally to sources other than the Hammond Laboratory." Comment. Many of the roots that nourished the work of the Hammond group and its contemporaries were recorded in our paper: the pioneering work of Wilson and Evans, Tesla, Shoemaker, in basic radiodynamics; . . . of Tesla and Fessenden leading to the development of basic intermediate frequency circuitry.
  8. ^ Nahin 2001, p. 91, stating "Fessenden's circuit was ahead of its time, however, as there simply was no technology available then with which to build the required local oscillator with the necessary frequency stability." Figure 7.10 shows a simplified 1907 heterodyne detector.
  9. ^ Fessenden 1905, p. 4
  10. ^ Ashley, Charles Grinnell; Heyward, Charles Brian (1912). Wireless Telegraphy and Wireless Telephony. Chicago: American School of Correspondence. pp. 103/15–104/16.
  11. ^ Tapan K. Sarkar, History of wireless, page 372
  12. ^ Videotape formats using 12-inch-wide (13 mm) tape June 16, 2006, at the Wayback Machine ; Retrieved 2007-01-01
  13. ^ Charles, Poynton (2003). Digital Video and HDTV: Algorithms and Interfaces. San Francisco: Morgan Kaufmann Publishers. pp. 582–3. ISBN 978-1-55860-792-7.
  14. ^ Guerra, John M. (June 26, 1995). "Super‐resolution through illumination by diffraction‐born evanescent waves". Applied Physics Letters. 66 (26): 3555–3557. Bibcode:1995ApPhL..66.3555G. doi:10.1063/1.113814. ISSN 0003-6951.
  15. ^ Contract Details: Robust Nanopopous Ceramic Microsensor Platform
  16. ^ Contract Details: High Pulsed Power Varactor Multipliers for Imaging
  17. ^ Patel, R.; Achamfuo-Yeboah, S.; Light R.; Clark M. (2011). "Widefield heterodyne interferometry using a custom CMOS modulated light camera". Optics Express. 19 (24): 24546–24556. Bibcode:2011OExpr..1924546P. doi:10.1364/oe.19.024546. PMID 22109482.
  18. ^ Patel, R.; Achamfuo-Yeboah, S.; Light R.; Clark M. (2012). "Ultrastable heterodyne interferometer system using a CMOS modulated light camera". Optics Express. 20 (16): 17722–17733. Bibcode:2012OExpr..2017722P. doi:10.1364/oe.20.017722. PMID 23038324.

General and cited references edit

  • US 1050441, Fessenden, Reginald A., "Electric Signaling Apparatus", published July 27, 1905, issued January 14, 1913 
  • Glinsky, Albert (2000). Theremin: Ether Music and Espionage. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-02582-2.
  • Nahin, Paul J. (2001). The Science of Radio with Matlab and Electronics Workbench Demonstrations (Second ed.). New York: Springer-Verlag, AIP Press. ISBN 978-0-387-95150-8.

Further reading edit

  • Hogan, John V. L. (April 1921). "The Heterodyne Receiver". Electric Journal. Vol. 18. p. 116.
  • US 706740, Fessenden, Reginald A., "Wireless Signaling", published September 28, 1901, issued August 12, 1902 
  • US 1050728, Fessenden, Reginald A., "Method of Signaling", published August 21, 1906, issued January 14, 1913 

heterodyne, this, article, about, waveform, manipulation, other, uses, disambiguation, heterodyne, signal, frequency, that, created, combining, mixing, other, frequencies, using, signal, processing, technique, called, heterodyning, which, invented, canadian, i. This article is about waveform manipulation For other uses see Heterodyne disambiguation A heterodyne is a signal frequency that is created by combining or mixing two other frequencies using a signal processing technique called heterodyning which was invented by Canadian inventor engineer Reginald Fessenden 1 2 3 Heterodyning is used to shift signals from one frequency range into another and is also involved in the processes of modulation and demodulation 2 4 The two input frequencies are combined in a nonlinear signal processing device such as a vacuum tube transistor or diode usually called a mixer 2 Frequency mixer symbol used in schematic diagramsIn the most common application two signals at frequencies f1 and f2 are mixed creating two new signals one at the sum of the two frequencies f1 f2 and the other at the difference between the two frequencies f1 f2 3 The new signal frequencies are called heterodynes Typically only one of the heterodynes is required and the other signal is filtered out of the output of the mixer Heterodyne frequencies are related to the phenomenon of beats in acoustics 2 5 6 A major application of the heterodyne process is in the superheterodyne radio receiver circuit which is used in virtually all modern radio receivers Contents 1 History 1 1 Superheterodyne receiver 2 Applications 2 1 Up and down converters 2 2 Analog videotape recording 2 3 Music synthesis 2 4 Optical heterodyning 3 Mathematical principle 3 1 Mixer 3 2 Output of a mixer 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 General and cited references 6 Further readingHistory edit nbsp Fessenden s heterodyne radio receiver circuit The incoming radio frequency and local oscillator frequency mix in the crystal diode detector In 1901 Reginald Fessenden demonstrated a direct conversion heterodyne receiver or beat receiver as a method of making continuous wave radiotelegraphy signals audible 7 Fessenden s receiver did not see much application because of its local oscillator s stability problem A stable yet inexpensive local oscillator was not available until Lee de Forest invented the triode vacuum tube oscillator 8 In a 1905 patent Fessenden stated that the frequency stability of his local oscillator was one part per thousand 9 In radio telegraphy the characters of text messages are translated into the short duration dots and long duration dashes of Morse code that are broadcast as radio signals Radio telegraphy was much like ordinary telegraphy One of the problems was building high power transmitters with the technology of the day Early transmitters were spark gap transmitters A mechanical device would make sparks at a fixed but audible rate the sparks would put energy into a resonant circuit that would then ring at the desired transmission frequency which might be 100 kHz This ringing would quickly decay so the output of the transmitter would be a succession of damped waves When these damped waves were received by a simple detector the operator would hear an audible buzzing sound that could be transcribed back into alpha numeric characters With the development of the arc converter radio transmitter in 1904 continuous wave CW modulation began to be used for radiotelegraphy CW Morse code signals are not amplitude modulated but rather consist of bursts of sinusoidal carrier frequency When CW signals are received by an AM receiver the operator does not hear a sound The direct conversion heterodyne detector was invented to make continuous wave radio frequency signals audible 10 The heterodyne or beat receiver has a local oscillator that produces a radio signal adjusted to be close in frequency to the incoming signal being received When the two signals are mixed a beat frequency equal to the difference between the two frequencies is created Adjusting the local oscillator frequency correctly puts the beat frequency in the audio range where it can be heard as a tone in the receiver s earphones whenever the transmitter signal is present Thus the Morse code dots and dashes are audible as beeping sounds This technique is still used in radio telegraphy the local oscillator now being called the beat frequency oscillator or BFO Fessenden coined the word heterodyne from the Greek roots hetero different and dyn power cf dynamis or dunamis 11 Superheterodyne receiver edit nbsp Block diagram of a typical superheterodyne receiver Red parts are those that handle the incoming radio frequency RF signal green are parts that operate at the intermediate frequency IF while blue parts operate at the modulation audio frequency An important and widely used application of the heterodyne technique is in the superheterodyne receiver superhet In the typical superhet the incoming radio frequency signal from the antenna is mixed heterodyned with a signal from a local oscillator LO to produce a lower fixed frequency signal called the intermediate frequency IF signal The IF signal is amplified and filtered and then applied to a detector that extracts the audio signal the audio is ultimately sent to the receiver s loudspeaker The superheterodyne receiver has several advantages over previous receiver designs One advantage is easier tuning only the RF filter and the LO are tuned by the operator the fixed frequency IF is tuned aligned at the factory and is not adjusted In older designs such as the tuned radio frequency receiver TRF all of the receiver stages had to be simultaneously tuned In addition since the IF filters are fixed tuned the receiver s selectivity is the same across the receiver s entire frequency band Another advantage is that the IF signal can be at a much lower frequency than the incoming radio signal and that allows each stage of the IF amplifier to provide more gain To first order an amplifying device has a fixed gain bandwidth product If the device has a gain bandwidth product of 60 MHz then it can provide a voltage gain of 3 at an RF of 20 MHz or a voltage gain of 30 at an IF of 2 MHz At a lower IF it would take fewer gain devices to achieve the same gain The regenerative radio receiver obtained more gain out of one gain device by using positive feedback but it required careful adjustment by the operator that adjustment also changed the selectivity of the regenerative receiver The superheterodyne provides a large stable gain and constant selectivity without troublesome adjustment The superior superheterodyne system replaced the earlier TRF and regenerative receiver designs and since the 1930s most commercial radio receivers have been superheterodynes Applications editHeterodyning also called frequency conversion is used very widely in communications engineering to generate new frequencies and move information from one frequency channel to another Besides its use in the superheterodyne circuit found in almost all radio and television receivers it is used in radio transmitters modems satellite communications and set top boxes radar radio telescopes telemetry systems cell phones cable television converter boxes and headends microwave relays metal detectors atomic clocks and military electronic countermeasure jamming systems Up and down converters edit In large scale telecommunication networks such as telephone network trunks microwave relay networks cable television systems and communication satellite links large bandwidth capacity links are shared by many individual communication channels by using heterodyning to move the frequency of the individual signals up to different frequencies which share the channel This is called frequency division multiplexing FDM For example a coaxial cable used by a cable television system can carry 500 television channels at the same time because each one is given a different frequency so they do not interfere with one another At the cable source or headend electronic upconverters convert each incoming television channel to a new higher frequency They do this by mixing the television signal frequency fCH with a local oscillator at a much higher frequency fLO creating a heterodyne at the sum fCH fLO which is added to the cable At the consumer s home the cable set top box has a downconverter that mixes the incoming signal at frequency fCH fLO with the same local oscillator frequency fLO creating the difference heterodyne frequency converting the television channel back to its original frequency fCH fLO fLO fCH Each channel is moved to a different higher frequency The original lower basic frequency of the signal is called the baseband while the higher channel it is moved to is called the passband Analog videotape recording edit Many analog videotape systems rely on a downconverted color subcarrier to record color information in their limited bandwidth These systems are referred to as heterodyne systems or color under systems For instance for NTSC video systems the VHS and S VHS recording system converts the color subcarrier from the NTSC standard 3 58 MHz to 629 kHz 12 PAL VHS color subcarrier is similarly downconverted but from 4 43 MHz The now obsolete 3 4 U matic systems use a heterodyned 688 kHz subcarrier for NTSC recordings as does Sony s Betamax which is at its basis a 1 2 consumer version of U matic while PAL U matic decks came in two mutually incompatible varieties with different subcarrier frequencies known as Hi Band and Low Band Other videotape formats with heterodyne color systems include Video 8 and Hi8 13 The heterodyne system in these cases is used to convert quadrature phase encoded and amplitude modulated sine waves from the broadcast frequencies to frequencies recordable in less than 1 MHz bandwidth On playback the recorded color information is heterodyned back to the standard subcarrier frequencies for display on televisions and for interchange with other standard video equipment Some U matic 3 4 decks feature 7 pin mini DIN connectors to allow dubbing of tapes without conversion as do some industrial VHS S VHS and Hi8 recorders Music synthesis edit The theremin an electronic musical instrument traditionally uses the heterodyne principle to produce a variable audio frequency in response to the movement of the musician s hands in the vicinity of one or more antennae which act as capacitor plates The output of a fixed radio frequency oscillator is mixed with that of an oscillator whose frequency is affected by the variable capacitance between the antenna and the musician s hand as it is moved near the pitch control antenna The difference between the two oscillator frequencies produces a tone in the audio range The ring modulator is a type of frequency mixer incorporated into some synthesizers or used as a stand alone audio effect Optical heterodyning edit Optical heterodyne detection an area of active research is an extension of the heterodyning technique to higher visible frequencies Guerra 14 1995 first published the results of what he called a form of optical heterodyning in which light patterned by a 50 nm pitch grating illuminated a second grating of pitch 50 nm with the gratings rotated with respect to each other by the angular amount needed to achieve magnification Although the illuminating wavelength was 650 nm the 50 nm grating was easily resolved This showed a nearly 5 fold improvement over the Abbe resolution limit of 232 nm that should have been the smallest obtained for the numerical aperture and wavelength used This super resolution microscopic imaging through optical heterodyning later came to be know by many as structured illumination microscopy In addition to super resolution optical microscopy optical heterodyning could greatly improve optical modulators increasing the density of information carried by optical fibers It is also being applied in the creation of more accurate atomic clocks based on directly measuring the frequency of a laser beam See NIST subtopic 9 07 9 4 R for a description of research on one system to do this 15 16 Since optical frequencies are far beyond the manipulation capacity of any feasible electronic circuit all visible frequency photon detectors are inherently energy detectors not oscillating electric field detectors However since energy detection is inherently square law detection it intrinsically mixes any optical frequencies present on the detector Thus sensitive detection of specific optical frequencies necessitates optical heterodyne detection in which two different close by wavelengths of light illuminate the detector so that the oscillating electrical output corresponds to the difference between their frequencies This allows extremely narrow band detection much narrower than any possible color filter can achieve as well as precision measurements of phase and frequency of a light signal relative to a reference light source as in a laser Doppler vibrometer This phase sensitive detection has been applied for Doppler measurements of wind speed and imaging through dense media The high sensitivity against background light is especially useful for lidar In optical Kerr effect OKE spectroscopy optical heterodyning of the OKE signal and a small part of the probe signal produces a mixed signal consisting of probe heterodyne OKE probe and homodyne OKE signal The probe and homodyne OKE signals can be filtered out leaving the heterodyne frequency signal for detection Heterodyne detection is often used in interferometry but usually confined to single point detection rather than widefield interferometry however widefield heterodyne interferometry is possible using a special camera 17 Using this technique which a reference signal extracted from a single pixel it is possible to build a highly stable widefield heterodyne interferometer by removing the piston phase component caused by microphonics or vibrations of the optical components or object 18 Mathematical principle editHeterodyning is based on the trigonometric identity cos 8 1 cos 8 2 1 2 cos 8 1 8 2 1 2 cos 8 1 8 2 displaystyle cos theta 1 cos theta 2 tfrac 1 2 cos theta 1 theta 2 tfrac 1 2 cos theta 1 theta 2 nbsp The product on the left hand side represents the multiplication mixing of a sine wave with another sine wave both produced by cosine functions The right hand side shows that the resulting signal is the difference of two sinusoidal terms one at the sum of the two original frequencies and one at the difference which can be dealt with separately since their large frequency difference makes it easy to cleanly filter out one signal s frequency while leaving the other signal unchanged Using this trigonometric identity the result of multiplying two cosine wave signals cos 2 p f 1 t displaystyle cos left 2 pi f 1 t right nbsp and cos 2 p f 2 t displaystyle cos left 2 pi f 2 t right nbsp at different frequencies f 1 displaystyle f 1 nbsp and f 2 displaystyle f 2 nbsp can be calculated cos 2 p f 1 t cos 2 p f 2 t 1 2 cos 2 p f 1 f 2 t 1 2 cos 2 p f 1 f 2 t displaystyle cos 2 pi f 1 t cos 2 pi f 2 t tfrac 1 2 cos 2 pi f 1 f 2 t tfrac 1 2 cos 2 pi f 1 f 2 t nbsp The result is the sum of two sinusoidal signals one at the sum f1 f2 and one at the difference f1 f2 of the original frequencies Mixer edit The two signals are combined in a device called a mixer As seen in the previous section an ideal mixer would be a device that multiplies the two signals Some widely used mixer circuits such as the Gilbert cell operate in this way but they are limited to lower frequencies However any nonlinear electronic component also multiplies signals applied to it producing heterodyne frequencies in its output so a variety of nonlinear components serve as mixers A nonlinear component is one in which the output current or voltage is a nonlinear function of its input Most circuit elements in communications circuits are designed to be linear This means they obey the superposition principle if F v displaystyle F v nbsp is the output of a linear element with an input of v displaystyle v nbsp F v 1 v 2 F v 1 F v 2 displaystyle F v 1 v 2 F v 1 F v 2 nbsp So if two sine wave signals at frequencies f1 and f2 are applied to a linear device the output is simply the sum of the outputs when the two signals are applied separately with no product terms Thus the function F displaystyle F nbsp must be nonlinear to create mixer products A perfect multiplier only produces mixer products at the sum and difference frequencies f1 f2 but more general nonlinear functions produce higher order mixer products n f1 m f2 for integers n and m Some mixer designs such as double balanced mixers suppress some high order undesired products while other designs such as harmonic mixers exploit high order differences Examples of nonlinear components that are used as mixers are vacuum tubes and transistors biased near cutoff class C and diodes Ferromagnetic core inductors driven into saturation can also be used at lower frequencies In nonlinear optics crystals that have nonlinear characteristics are used to mix laser light beams to create optical heterodyne frequencies Output of a mixer edit To demonstrate mathematically how a nonlinear component can multiply signals and generate heterodyne frequencies the nonlinear function F displaystyle F nbsp can be expanded in a power series MacLaurin series F v a 1 v a 2 v 2 a 3 v 3 displaystyle F v alpha 1 v alpha 2 v 2 alpha 3 v 3 cdots nbsp To simplify the math the higher order terms above a2 are indicated by an ellipsis displaystyle cdots nbsp and only the first terms are shown Applying the two sine waves at frequencies w1 2p f1 and w2 2p f2 to this device v o u t F A 1 cos w 1 t A 2 cos w 2 t displaystyle v mathsf out F Bigl A 1 cos omega 1 t A 2 cos omega 2 t Bigr nbsp v o u t a 1 A 1 cos w 1 t A 2 cos w 2 t a 2 A 1 cos w 1 t A 2 cos w 2 t 2 displaystyle v mathsf out alpha 1 Bigl A 1 cos omega 1 t A 2 cos omega 2 t Bigr alpha 2 Bigl A 1 cos omega 1 t A 2 cos omega 2 t Bigr 2 cdots nbsp v o u t a 1 A 1 cos w 1 t A 2 cos w 2 t a 2 A 1 2 cos 2 w 1 t 2 A 1 A 2 cos w 1 t cos w 2 t A 2 2 cos 2 w 2 t displaystyle v mathsf out alpha 1 Bigl A 1 cos omega 1 t A 2 cos omega 2 t Bigr alpha 2 Bigl A 1 2 cos 2 omega 1 t 2A 1 A 2 cos omega 1 t cos omega 2 t A 2 2 cos 2 omega 2 t Bigr cdots nbsp It can be seen that the second term above contains a product of the two sine waves Simplifying with trigonometric identities v o u t a 1 A 1 cos w 1 t A 2 cos w 2 t a 2 1 2 A 1 2 1 cos 2 w 1 t A 1 A 2 cos w 1 t w 2 t cos w 1 t w 2 t 1 2 A 2 2 1 cos 2 w 2 t displaystyle begin aligned v mathsf out amp alpha 1 Bigl A 1 cos omega 1 t A 2 cos omega 2 t Bigr amp alpha 2 Bigl tfrac 1 2 A 1 2 1 cos 2 omega 1 t A 1 A 2 cos omega 1 t omega 2 t cos omega 1 t omega 2 t tfrac 1 2 A 2 2 1 cos 2 omega 2 t Bigr cdots end aligned nbsp Which leaves the two heterodyne frequencies as two among the many terms v o u t a 2 A 1 A 2 cos w 1 w 2 t a 2 A 1 A 2 cos w 1 w 2 t displaystyle v mathsf out cdots alpha 2 A 1 A 2 cos omega 1 omega 2 t alpha 2 A 1 A 2 cos omega 1 omega 2 t cdots nbsp along with many other terms not shown Among many other frequencies the output contains sinusoidal terms with frequencies at the sum w1 w2 and difference w1 w2 of the two original frequencies It also contains terms at the original frequencies and terms at multiples of the original frequencies 2 w1 2 w2 3 w1 3 w2 etc called harmonics It also contains much more complicated terms at frequencies of M w1 N w2 called intermodulation products These unwanted frequencies along with the unwanted heterodyne frequency must be removed from the mixer output by an electronic filter to leave the desired heterodyne frequency See also editElectroencephalography Homodyne Intermodulation a problem with strong higher order terms produced in some non linear mixers TransverterReferences editCitations edit Christopher E Cooper January 2001 Physics Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers pp 25 ISBN 978 1 57958 358 3 a b c d United States Bureau of Naval Personnel 1973 Basic Electronics USA Courier Dover p 338 ISBN 978 0 486 21076 6 a b Graf Rudolf F 1999 Modern dictionary of electronics 7th ed USA Newnes p 344 ISBN 978 0 7506 9866 5 Horowitz Paul Hill Winfield 1989 The Art of Electronics 2nd ed London Cambridge University Press pp 885 897 ISBN 978 0 521 37095 0 Strange Allen Strange Patricia 2003 The Contemporary Violin Extended Performance Techniques Scarecrow Press p 216 ISBN 978 0 520 22409 4 Ingard Uno 2008 Acoustics Jones and Bartlett pp 18 21 ISBN 978 1 934015 08 7 Discussion of A History of Some Foundations of Modern Radio Electronic Technology Comments by Lloyd Espenschied Proceedings of the IRE July 1959 Vol 47 No 7 pp 1254 1256 Critique the roots of our modern technology trace back generally to sources other than the Hammond Laboratory Comment Many of the roots that nourished the work of the Hammond group and its contemporaries were recorded in our paper the pioneering work of Wilson and Evans Tesla Shoemaker in basic radiodynamics of Tesla and Fessenden leading to the development of basic intermediate frequency circuitry Nahin 2001 p 91 stating Fessenden s circuit was ahead of its time however as there simply was no technology available then with which to build the required local oscillator with the necessary frequency stability Figure 7 10 shows a simplified 1907 heterodyne detector Fessenden 1905 p 4 Ashley Charles Grinnell Heyward Charles Brian 1912 Wireless Telegraphy and Wireless Telephony Chicago American School of Correspondence pp 103 15 104 16 Tapan K Sarkar History of wireless page 372 Videotape formats using 1 2 inch wide 13 mm tape Archived June 16 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2007 01 01 Charles Poynton 2003 Digital Video and HDTV Algorithms and Interfaces San Francisco Morgan Kaufmann Publishers pp 582 3 ISBN 978 1 55860 792 7 Guerra John M June 26 1995 Super resolution through illumination by diffraction born evanescent waves Applied Physics Letters 66 26 3555 3557 Bibcode 1995ApPhL 66 3555G doi 10 1063 1 113814 ISSN 0003 6951 Contract Details Robust Nanopopous Ceramic Microsensor Platform Contract Details High Pulsed Power Varactor Multipliers for Imaging Patel R Achamfuo Yeboah S Light R Clark M 2011 Widefield heterodyne interferometry using a custom CMOS modulated light camera Optics Express 19 24 24546 24556 Bibcode 2011OExpr 1924546P doi 10 1364 oe 19 024546 PMID 22109482 Patel R Achamfuo Yeboah S Light R Clark M 2012 Ultrastable heterodyne interferometer system using a CMOS modulated light camera Optics Express 20 16 17722 17733 Bibcode 2012OExpr 2017722P doi 10 1364 oe 20 017722 PMID 23038324 General and cited references edit US 1050441 Fessenden Reginald A Electric Signaling Apparatus published July 27 1905 issued January 14 1913 Glinsky Albert 2000 Theremin Ether Music and Espionage Urbana IL University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 02582 2 Nahin Paul J 2001 The Science of Radio with Matlab and Electronics Workbench Demonstrations Second ed New York Springer Verlag AIP Press ISBN 978 0 387 95150 8 Further reading editHogan John V L April 1921 The Heterodyne Receiver Electric Journal Vol 18 p 116 US 706740 Fessenden Reginald A Wireless Signaling published September 28 1901 issued August 12 1902 US 1050728 Fessenden Reginald A Method of Signaling published August 21 1906 issued January 14 1913 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Heterodyne amp oldid 1200314686, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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