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Say I have two sine waves, one of 500hz and another of 510hz, both with an initial phase of 0 degrees. What is the relationship, if any, of the two signals' phase difference over time as caused by the frequency difference?

2006-11-03 10:34:41 · 2 answers · asked by jerkables 1 in Science & Mathematics Physics

2 answers

The phase relation is constantly changing at 10 Hz, or 3600 degrees/second or 20*pi radians/sec. If both sinewaves are of equal amplitude A and you sum them (mix them together) you will have an amplitude modulated wave that varies in amplitude between 0 (the value when they are out of phase) and 2*A (the value when they are in phase) at 10 Hz.

2006-11-03 10:36:48 · answer #1 · answered by kirchwey 7 · 3 0

o=.10 hz or thereabouts.frequency volume mass would be distributed o*m at velocity therefore a certain type of gravity is created by the difference or weight tension, picture them as expanding spheres creating bproprietory area for themselves w/one exceeding the other by 10 hz velocity, note for reference a static measurement of c=1 and all other frequencies represented by decimals would be interesting.

2006-11-03 18:54:55 · answer #2 · answered by Book of Changes 3 · 0 0

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