US1923543A - Modulation system - Google Patents

Modulation system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1923543A
US1923543A US584099A US58409931A US1923543A US 1923543 A US1923543 A US 1923543A US 584099 A US584099 A US 584099A US 58409931 A US58409931 A US 58409931A US 1923543 A US1923543 A US 1923543A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
screen
grid
anode
modulating
plate
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US584099A
Inventor
Walter L Lawrence
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
AT&T Corp
Original Assignee
Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc filed Critical Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority to US584099A priority Critical patent/US1923543A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1923543A publication Critical patent/US1923543A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03CMODULATION
    • H03C1/00Amplitude modulation
    • H03C1/16Amplitude modulation by means of discharge device having at least three electrodes
    • H03C1/18Amplitude modulation by means of discharge device having at least three electrodes carrier applied to control grid
    • H03C1/24Amplitude modulation by means of discharge device having at least three electrodes carrier applied to control grid modulating signal applied to different grid
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T24/00Buckles, buttons, clasps, etc.
    • Y10T24/16Belt fasteners
    • Y10T24/1676V, round, trapezoidal belts

Landscapes

  • Toys (AREA)

Description

8- 1933- I w. 1.. LAWRENCE 1,923,543
MODULATION SYSTEM Filed Dec. 31, 1931 HIGH FREQUENCY AMPLIFIER FREQUENCY AMPLIFIER INVEN TOR W L. LAWRENCE yx M A TTORNEY Patented Aug. .22 1933 MonULArIoN SYSTEM Walter L. Lawrence, New'Yorlr, N. Y., assignor to Bell Telephone Laboratories, incorporated, New York, N. Y., a Corporation of New York Application December 31; 1931 Serial No. 584,099
4 Claims' (or. 179-471) This invention relates to modulating systems and more particularly to systems using as a modulating device four-element space discharge tubes of the screen-grid type.
An object of the invention is to increase the modulated output obtainable fromscreen-grid type modulators.
Another object is to prevent interaction be tween the carrier input circuit of a modulator and the output circuit for the modulated wave.
In accordance with the invention an unmodulated carrier wave is impressed upon the control grid of a screen-grid tube and the modulating wave is impressed simultaneously and in like phase upon both the screen electrode and the anode, the values of the screen and anode impressed voltages being maintained in a definite relationship.
By this arrangernenhsince the screen voltage varies simultaneously with the anode voltage, the
screen is prevented from blocking the space cure rent to the anode even when the anode voltage is very low and, in consequence, it is possible to apply large voltage variations to the anode with a corresponding increase in the modulation output. At the same time the electrostatic shielding effect of the screen eliminates capacity coupling between the carrier input circuit and the high frequency output circuit, thereby preventing the generation of local oscillations in the modulator circuit. r
The arrangement of the invention is particularly advantageous for the modulation of very high frequency waves. input circuit and the high frequencyoutput circuit will be tuned to substantially the same frequency and, in the absence of electrostatic screening in the tube, singing will occur very readily. By the present invention such singing is prevented while at the same time a large degree of modulation is made possible.
The invention will be described in detail hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawing, the single figure of which represents a radio transmitting system embodying the invention.
Reference character 1 indicates a vacuum tube of the screen-grid type arranged to be operated as a modulator in accordance with the invention. The tube has a control grid 2 which is supplied with unmodulated high frequency oscillations by a suitable oscillator 3 through a tuned transformer 19. The plate t and screen-grid 5 are supplied with modulating currents produced by a microphone-6 and amplified by a low frequency amplifier 7. A transformer 3 having a primary In such casesthe carrier winding 9 and two secondary windings 1 0 and 11 serves to impress the modulating current from the amplifier I? in like phase upon the electrodes l and 5. The windings 1e and 11 are connected in parallel across a battery 12 andare so poled that the currents induced in the windings 10 and 11 by a current in the primary windings 9 causes the potentials of the respective electrodes 4 and 5 to increase orv decrease together. The normal biasing potential of the plate t is made somewhat higher than the potential of the screen-grid 5 by an additional battery 13. A 1ow-pass filter 14 in 1 the plate battery supply circuit and a similar filter 15 in the screen-grid circuit are employed to prevent interaction of high frequency 79' currents in the respective battery supply circuits. The plate circuit has a branch including a resonant network 16 which is tuned for the carrier frequency and designed to pass the modulated high frequency currents. These currents are amplified in a high frequency amplifier 1'7 and impressed upon an antenna 13. I v
In the operation of the system illustrated the instantaneous potential of the plate varies in accordance with the fluctuations of the modulating current. Simultaneously the potential of the screen-grid 5 varies in a like manner. Without the simultaneous screen fluctuations, the plate current would not be materially altered or conv trolled by the fluctuations in the plate potential, I
due to the fixed shielding effect of the screengrid. When, however, this latter effect is made a vary-in phase with the plate potential the result is obtained that the plate current varies widely in accordance with the fluctuations of the 0' low frequency current, and the high frequency oscillations from the source 3 are correspondingly modulated to a large degree. From a slightly different point of View the plate and screen-grid with their potentials varying in phase with each other may be regarded as constituting an electrode system equivalent to the single plate or anode in a three-element tube. The current passing through this equivalent anode system is modulated in'much the same manner as obtains in well known plate current modulation systems disclosed in U. S. Patent 1, i l2,l l7, issued to R.
A. Heising. The high modulating efficiency of the three-electrode tube is, therefore, obtainable and at the same time the screen grid retains its function of shielding the plate 4 from the control grid 2, thus preventing singing in themodulater circuits and-rendering the output and the input circuits independent of each other whereby of modulating current to said screen -grid to produce variations in the voltage between: said screen-grid and said cathode, saidlast mentioned voltage variations being controlled to be substan tially in phase with said first mentioned voltage variations and said screen grid constituting an electrostatic screen between said anode andsaid control grid to substantially prevent regenerative action in saidtube. a
2. A modulating system comprising an electric discharge tube'having a cathode, an anode, a control grid, and a screen-grid; a source of carrier -waves, a source of modulating current, means connecting said source ofcarrier waves to said control grid, means connecting said source of' modulating current tosaidanode and screen-grid min-phase relation to modulate the carrier waves induced in the anode circuit by'saidcontrol grid,
and an output circuit connected to said anode for transmitting modulated carrier waves, said screen grid being adapted to virtually shield the control grid from regenerative action of said output circuit.
3. A modulating system comprising an electric discharge tube having a cathode, an anode, and a screen-grid, means for effecting high frequency variations in the potential between said anode and cathode, a source. of modulating current, a
transformer having a primary winding connected to said source of modulating current and a pair of secondary windings connected respectively to the anode and the screen-grid and arranged to impressmodulating currents in substantially like phase upon said anode and screen-grid.
4. A modulating system comprising an electric discharge tube having input and output terminals electrostatically screened from eachother to substantially prevent regenerative action in said tube, means for effecting high frequency variations in the potential of said output terminal, a source of modulating current, means for causing modulating currents from said source to vary the potential of said output terminal and means: for varying the degree of screening in synchronism 'with said output potential variations to' effect modulation of said high frequency variations under the control of said modulating current.
WALTER L. LAWRENCE.
US584099A 1931-12-31 1931-12-31 Modulation system Expired - Lifetime US1923543A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US584099A US1923543A (en) 1931-12-31 1931-12-31 Modulation system

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US584099A US1923543A (en) 1931-12-31 1931-12-31 Modulation system

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1923543A true US1923543A (en) 1933-08-22

Family

ID=24335928

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US584099A Expired - Lifetime US1923543A (en) 1931-12-31 1931-12-31 Modulation system

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1923543A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3286184A (en) * 1963-09-11 1966-11-15 Western Electric Co Portable telephone system

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3286184A (en) * 1963-09-11 1966-11-15 Western Electric Co Portable telephone system

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2297926A (en) Frequency modulated transmitter
US2432720A (en) Amplitude modulation system
US1673002A (en) Control of electric waves
US2480820A (en) Wave length control of wave energy
US1923543A (en) Modulation system
US2346800A (en) Wave length modulator
US2171151A (en) Circuit for amplitude modulation carrier wave
US2482561A (en) Voltage two-tone source
US1926875A (en) Modulating system
US2074440A (en) Modulator
US2814020A (en) Arrangement for developing oscillations frequency modulated according to modulation signals
US2027975A (en) Frequency modulation
US2223430A (en) Modulation system
US2422422A (en) Reactance tube controlled generator
US2480705A (en) Frequency shift keyer
US2120800A (en) Transmitter
US2156088A (en) Multielement electron discharge apparatus and system
US2463275A (en) Modulation
US2250095A (en) Wave control and control circuit
US2134065A (en) Modulator
US2279661A (en) Wave control and control circuit
US1739005A (en) Circuit arrangement for the operation of photo-electric cells
US2454954A (en) Frequency modulation
US2445568A (en) Modulating system
US2183795A (en) Modulator system