US1502063A - Electric-wave receiver - Google Patents

Electric-wave receiver Download PDF

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Publication number
US1502063A
US1502063A US422339A US42233920A US1502063A US 1502063 A US1502063 A US 1502063A US 422339 A US422339 A US 422339A US 42233920 A US42233920 A US 42233920A US 1502063 A US1502063 A US 1502063A
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Prior art keywords
frequency
electric
wave
beat
wave receiver
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US422339A
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Schottky Walter
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Siemens and Halske AG
Siemens AG
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Siemens AG
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B1/00Details of transmission systems, not covered by a single one of groups H04B3/00 - H04B13/00; Details of transmission systems not characterised by the medium used for transmission
    • H04B1/06Receivers
    • H04B1/16Circuits

Definitions

  • My invention refers to the transmission of wireless. signals and more especially to the receivers employed for this purpose and its particular object is a receiver system for electric waves of superior efficiency.
  • This method involves a number of advantages.
  • the efficiency of the rectifier is improved.
  • the rectifier current increases at least for small amplitudes approximately in proportion to the square of the effective pressure and that therefore their eficiency at very small high frequency alternating current amplitudes is very low.
  • the sensibility is on the contrary about a hnear one.
  • an amplifying tube can be dispensed with in many cases.
  • the increase of the amplitude by superpos1t1on is superior to the increase by high frequency amplification in so far as troubles caused by high frequency waves of a difierent frequency result in case of beat reception in a widely different and generally inaudible frequency, whereas the high frequency amplifier tube amplifies such troubles as well as the signal.
  • the present invention furnishes means for practically carrying out the beat reception with inaudible group frequencies. This is effected principally by the transformation of the wave current of the rectifier into an alternating current which is then rectified once more for the purpose of forming the signal. If the system would comprise merely the two detectors with a transformation of ing to the present invention, therefore, the
  • the selective preference for a predetermined frequency may also be carried out by means of a suitable amplifier tube, those parts of said tube which are capable of resonance, being to this end tuned to the corresponding group frequency.
  • FIG. 1 showing diagrammatically the sysposed from a suitable source by means of a.
  • the local high frequency of such sort is supertransformer U that the group frequency resultin therefrom' lies either between the high requency and the low frequency or preferably above audible frequency.
  • llhis' audible beat or group frequency is then rectified in the detector D and transferred by the oscillatory circuits ll, lfll which are tuned to this group frequency, to the amplifier tubeV.
  • the am lified wave impulses coming from the ampli or tube V are rectified in the detector D, and can then be received. as audible frequency currents in the receiver T.
  • Fig. 2 shows the form of the high frequency waves arriving at the station
  • Fig. 3 shows the wave after the superposition of the local high frequency wave andthe beat wave produced in the transformer
  • Fig. 4 shows the wave after 'rectifica tion in the detector D and after'inductive transfer from oscillatory circuit'li to oscillatory circuit H.
  • the wave has not been amplified, but its" amplitude is the same, as in the ori inal wave, and is merely transformed into t e lower group frequency.
  • Fig. 5 shows the waves of the same group frequency afterthe passage through the amplifier tube V!
  • Fig. 6 shows the signal result- I 5%) ing from the passage of waves according to Fig 5 through the second detector 11),.
  • a receiving system for high frequency electric waves comprising in combination a local source for superimposing on the re- 'local source for superimposing on the received frequency a local frequency difierent from that received and adapted to produce abeat frequency current above the limit of audibility, a rectifier adapted to rectify said beat frequency current, means tuned to said beat frequency for-transforming said rectified current into alternating current, an amplifier tube having its circuit connection tuned to said beat frequency and adapted to amplify said alternating current and means for rectifying said amplified current to pro Jerusalem an audible signal.

Description

J iy 192 w. s c'Ho'rTKY ELECTRIC W VE RECEIVER Fil ed Nov. 6. 1920 1 1mm mlmwuu 1m 11' um "11 mull " nm mm Patented July 22, 1924.
WALTER SGHOTTKY, OF WURZBURG, GERMANY, ASSIGNOR '10 SIEMENS & EALS AKTIENGESELLSCHAIFT, OF SIEMENSSTADT, NEAR BERLIN, GERMANY, A G ":3
GOBIPORATION.
ELECTRIC-WAVE RECEIVER.
Application filed November 6, 1920. Serial No. 422,339.
(GRANTED UNDER THE PROVISIONS OF THE ACT OF MARCH 3, 1921, 41 STAT. L, 1313.)
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, WALTER SCHOTTKY, a citizen of the German Empire, residing at Wurzburg, Germany, have invented certain 5 new and useful Improvements in Electric- Wave Receivers, for which I have filed applications in Germany on June 18, 1918; Austria on May 30, 1919; France on August 14-, 1919, Patent No. 518,890; and England, November 7, 1919, Patent No. 135,177, and of which the following is a specification.
My invention refers to the transmission of wireless. signals and more especially to the receivers employed for this purpose and its particular object is a receiver system for electric waves of superior efficiency.
In wireless telegraphy it is known that by superposing a high frequency energy generated at the receiving station over oscillations to be received and having an almost identical frequency a variation of the waveamplitude can be generated in the apparatus whose frequency corresponds to an audible signal.
This method, commonly called beat reception in the art, involves a number of advantages. First of all it is possible to obtain an audible signal by simple rectification from such a high freqiuency energy and variation of the amplitu' e. Furthermore the efficiency of the rectifier is improved. For it is a property peculiar to rectifiers acting as detectors that the rectifier current increases at least for small amplitudes approximately in proportion to the square of the effective pressure and that therefore their eficiency at very small high frequency alternating current amplitudes is very low. For large amplitudes such as are formed by superposition of local frequenc1es the sensibility is on the contrary about a hnear one. Owing to this increase in efliclency of the rectifier an amplifying tube can be dispensed with in many cases. The increase of the amplitude by superpos1t1on is superior to the increase by high frequency amplification in so far as troubles caused by high frequency waves of a difierent frequency result in case of beat reception in a widely different and generally inaudible frequency, whereas the high frequency amplifier tube amplifies such troubles as well as the signal.
In wireless telephony it has been proposed to employ a superposition frequency of such sort that the group or beat frequency resulting from it and from the arriving high frequency lies above the telephonic frequency in order not to trouble the receiving by sound of the signals. However this method is not applicable there and then, for the direct application of the rectifier efiect does not furnish any effect whatever in a tele-' phone or a like apparatus, the positive and the negative crests of group frequency bal- I ancing each other in their total effect.
The present invention furnishes means for practically carrying out the beat reception with inaudible group frequencies. This is effected principally by the transformation of the wave current of the rectifier into an alternating current which is then rectified once more for the purpose of forming the signal. If the system would comprise merely the two detectors with a transformation of ing to the present invention, therefore, the
current is amplified between the rectifiers.
It is further possible to prevent within wide limits all troubles inherent to high and low frequency currents by tuning to the group frequency. The selective preference for a predetermined frequency may also be carried out by means of a suitable amplifier tube, those parts of said tube which are capable of resonance, being to this end tuned to the corresponding group frequency.
In the drawings aflixed to this specification and forming part thereof the preferred form of a system of connection for heat reception according to my invention is illustrated,
Fig. 1 showing diagrammatically the sysposed from a suitable source by means of a.
local high frequency of such sort is supertransformer U that the group frequency resultin therefrom' lies either between the high requency and the low frequency or preferably above audible frequency. llhis' audible beat or group frequency is then rectified in the detector D and transferred by the oscillatory circuits ll, lfll which are tuned to this group frequency, to the amplifier tubeV. The am lified wave impulses coming from the ampli or tube V are rectified in the detector D, and can then be received. as audible frequency currents in the receiver T.
Fig. 2 shows the form of the high frequency waves arriving at the station, while Fig. 3 shows the wave after the superposition of the local high frequency wave andthe beat wave produced in the transformer U Fig. 4 shows the wave after 'rectifica tion in the detector D and after'inductive transfer from oscillatory circuit'li to oscillatory circuit H. The wave has not been amplified, but its" amplitude is the same, as in the ori inal wave, and is merely transformed into t e lower group frequency. Fig. 5 shows the waves of the same group frequency afterthe passage through the amplifier tube V! Fig. 6 shows the signal result- I 5%) ing from the passage of waves according to Fig 5 through the second detector 11),.
r eoaoea ll claims 1. A receiving system for high frequency electric waves comprising in combination a local source for superimposing on the re- 'local source for superimposing on the received frequency a local frequency difierent from that received and adapted to produce abeat frequency current above the limit of audibility, a rectifier adapted to rectify said beat frequency current, means tuned to said beat frequency for-transforming said rectified current into alternating current, an amplifier tube having its circuit connection tuned to said beat frequency and adapted to amplify said alternating current and means for rectifying said amplified current to pro duce an audible signal.
In testimony whereof I afix my signature.
WALTER SCHGTTKY.
US422339A 1920-11-06 1920-11-06 Electric-wave receiver Expired - Lifetime US1502063A (en)

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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2636980A (en) * 1953-04-28
US2752486A (en) * 1950-10-18 1956-06-26 Rca Corp Ultra high frequency oscillation injection equalizer
US2894077A (en) * 1955-11-21 1959-07-07 Philco Corp Modular circuitry

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2636980A (en) * 1953-04-28
US2752486A (en) * 1950-10-18 1956-06-26 Rca Corp Ultra high frequency oscillation injection equalizer
US2894077A (en) * 1955-11-21 1959-07-07 Philco Corp Modular circuitry

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