US1287982A - Modulating system. - Google Patents

Modulating system. Download PDF

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Publication number
US1287982A
US1287982A US14897817A US14897817A US1287982A US 1287982 A US1287982 A US 1287982A US 14897817 A US14897817 A US 14897817A US 14897817 A US14897817 A US 14897817A US 1287982 A US1287982 A US 1287982A
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windings
signaling
carrier
currents
cores
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Expired - Lifetime
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US14897817A
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Ralph V L Hartley
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AT&T Corp
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Western Electric Co Inc
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03CMODULATION
    • H03C1/00Amplitude modulation
    • H03C1/08Amplitude modulation by means of variable impedance element
    • H03C1/10Amplitude modulation by means of variable impedance element the element being a current-dependent inductor

Definitions

  • This invention relates to modulating systems in which high frequency carrier currents are modified or modulated in accordance with the signal to be transmitted.
  • Ser No. 139,784 filed December 30, 1916, applicant has described and claimed a modulator of the magnetic type by means of which the carrier currents are modulated by varying the permeability of a carrier frequency transformer in accordance with a speech signal.
  • the present invention has to do with improving the quality of speech transmitted by modulators of the magnetic type.
  • One way in which this may be done is to subject the magnetic core to a relatively weak and rapidly alternating cross-magnetization which keeps the molecules of the iron in a constant state of agitation, and renders them more susceptible to changes in the longitudinal magnetization produced by the modulating speech currents.
  • a further advantage in reducing the hysteresis is to improve the sensitiveness of the modulator.
  • This sensitiveness may be defined as the ratio of the modulated high frequency power to the low frequency power affecting the modulation.
  • Fig. 2 illustrates a modification in which the carrier current windings are at right angles to the remaining windings
  • Fig. 3 shows details of the magnetic core construction.
  • the modulator M which is of the magnetic type, is supplied with carrier currents from the source 3, which are to be modulated in accordance with signaling currents supplied by the signaling circuit at.
  • the battery 5 supplies a steady current which brings the magnetization of the toroidal cores 6 and 7 to the desired point about which the magnetization is varied by the signaling currents.
  • the source 8 supplies currents of a frequency higher than the carrier frequency supplied by the source 3 for the purpose of reducing the hysteresis.
  • the circuit of source 8 may be traced from the source through the turns of coil 16 in series to conductor 28, through the turns of coil 15 in series, back to source 8.
  • the carrier source 3 supplies currents to the primary windings 9 and 10, which are individual to each of the cores 6 and 7, and which produce high frequency fluxes in opposite directions in these cores so that the signaling winding 11, which is common to both cores, is substantially non-inductively related to the windings 9 and 10.
  • the opposing high frequency fluxes induce a resultant zero carrier frequency electromotive force in the signaling winding 11.
  • the secondary windings 12 and 13 are adapted to supply modulated carrier currents to the radiating antenna system 14.
  • the windings 12 and 13 are wound in opposite directions and areindividual to each of the cores 6 and 7.
  • means such as the windings l5 and 16 disposed within the cores 6 and 7, are provided for producing a magnetic field which is at right angles to the magnetic field produced by signaling winding 11 and the windings 9, 1O, 13 and 12.
  • the windings l5 and 16 are supplied by the source 8 with comparatively weak and very rapidly alternating currents, which have a frequency which is higher than that supplied by the carrier source 3.
  • the signaling current supplied by the circuit 4 may be amplified, if desired, by one or more amplifiers 17 of the audion type.
  • the cores 6 and 7 may be constructed as shown in Fig. 3, in which the halves of the cores 18 and 19 which are suitably held in assembled position are preferably made of compressed iron dust, and are channeled to receive the Winding.
  • the antenna circuit may be traced from antenna 14 through the turns of the secondary Winding 22 in series to ground at 29.
  • the carrier current source 3 is connected in series with primary winding 21. Windings 21 and 22 are both disposed within magnetic core 23.
  • the low frequency winding 24 is wound around the core 23 so that the high frequency carrier current windings 21 and 22 produce magnetic fields which are at right angles to that produced by the signaling winding 24.
  • the signaling winding 24 is non-inductively related to the carrier frequency windings 21 and 22 and the signaling winding 24 will accordingly not have any carrier frequency currents induced therein.
  • the source 8 supplying a frequency higher than the carrier frequency, in this case is connected through condensers 25 and 26 about a portion 27 of the signaling winding 24.
  • the rapidly alternating magnetic eld produced by the currents traversing the portion 27 of the winding 24 produces a field which is at right angles to the carrier frequency field so that the hysteresis is reduced, as in Fig. 1, by high frequency cross-magnetizing field.
  • windings 15 and 16 or 21 and 22 within the magnetic cores may be of iron, in which case the magnetic cores may be dispensed with, as the windings themselves would, in this case, provide the magnetizable means.
  • a high frequency signaling system comprising a modulator of the magnetic type having magnetizable means, means for supplying carrier currents for magnetizing said means, means for modulating said carrier currents, and means for reducing the hysteresis in said magnetizable'means.
  • a high frequency signaling system comprising magnetizable means, carrier current windings, and signaling windings associated with said magnetizable means, and
  • a high frequency signaling system comprising a modulator of the magnetic type having magnetizable means, signaling cirmeans for supplying said magnetizable means with a rapidly alternating crossmagnetic field relative to the field produced by currents flowing in said carrier current windings.
  • a modulating system comprising a modulator of the magnetic type, means for supplying said modulator with (1) signaling currents, (2) currents of the carrier frequency and (3) currents of a frequency higher than said carrier frequency, and a high frequency line adapted to be supplied with modulated currents by said modulator.
  • a modulating system comprising the combination of magnetizable means, carrier current windings and signaling windings associated with said magnetizable means, said carrier current windings being noni'nduc-tively related to said signaling windings, and means for reducing hysteresis in said magnetizable means.
  • a modulating system comprising magnetizable means and four windings associated therewith, means for supplying signaling current to one of said windings, means for supplying currents of a carrier frequency to another of said windings, means for supplying current of a frequenc higher than sald. carrier frequency to a t ird winding, and a high frequency line adapted to be energized by said fourth winding.
  • a modulating system comprising magnetizable means, signaling windings and carrier current windings wound around said magnetizable means, and hysteresis reducing windings within said magnetizable means.
  • a modulating system comprising the combination of two magnetic cores, a signaling winding common to both of said cores, carrier current primary and secondary windings individual to each of said cores, and hysteresis reducing windings within each of said cores.
  • a modulating system the combination of two magnetic cores, a signaling winding common to both of said cores, means for supplying signaling currents and a steady current to said signaling Winding, 13.
  • the method of modulation which comprimary and secondary windings individual prises subjecting a carrier frequency current to each of said cores, means for supplying to the action of a magnetic impedance elego carrier currents to said primar windings, ment and subjecting the impedance element a high frequency line adapted to be enerto the action of an alternating flux of fregized by said secondary windings, other quency higher than that of said current.
  • a carrier frequency circuit a signalmeans for supplying currents of a frequency ing frequency circuit, magnetic means asso- 25 higher than that of said carrier currents to ciated with both of said circuits, and means said other windings. for subjecting said magnetic means to the 12.
  • a modulating system a circuit inaction of an alternating flux of frequency eluding a sourceof carrier frequency oscilhigher than the carrier frequency.

Description

R. V. L. HARTLEY.
MODULATING SYSTEM.
APPLICATION FILED FEB. 16. 1911.
1,287,982. Patented Dec. 17, 1918.
/7 VeH/OK' 5440/6 l/L Harf/ey A/fy RALPH v. L. HARTLEY, or BROOKLYN. COMPANY, INCORPORATED, or NEW NEW YORK, ASSIGN OR TO WESTERN ELECTRIC YORK, N. Y., A CORPORATION OF NEW YORK.
MODULATIN G SYSTEM.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented Dec. 17, 1918.
Application filed February 16, 1917. Serial No. 148,978.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, R-ALrrrV. L. HAnTLuY, a citizen of the United States, residing at Brooklyn, in the county of Kings and State of New York, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Modulating Systerns, of which the following is a full, clear, concise, and exact description.
This invention relates to modulating systems in which high frequency carrier currents are modified or modulated in accordance with the signal to be transmitted. In a copending application, Serial No. 139,784, filed December 30, 1916, applicant has described and claimed a modulator of the magnetic type by means of which the carrier currents are modulated by varying the permeability of a carrier frequency transformer in accordance with a speech signal.
- The quality of the speech transmitted by prior modulators of the magnetic type is relatively poor, as the modulated high frequency wave form is distorted by the hysteresis of the magnetic core forming a part of the modulator.
The present invention has to do with improving the quality of speech transmitted by modulators of the magnetic type.
This is accomplished by reducing the hys teresis of the magnetic core of the modulator. One way in which this may be done is to subject the magnetic core to a relatively weak and rapidly alternating cross-magnetization which keeps the molecules of the iron in a constant state of agitation, and renders them more susceptible to changes in the longitudinal magnetization produced by the modulating speech currents.
A further advantage in reducing the hysteresis is to improve the sensitiveness of the modulator. This sensitiveness may be defined as the ratio of the modulated high frequency power to the low frequency power affecting the modulation. By reducing the hysteresis loss a greater amount of modulated high frequency power can be produced by a given amount of low frequency modulating power, 2'. 6., the sensitiveness of the modulator is increased.
Two ways of carrying out the invention are shown in the drawing, in which- Figure 1 illustrates diagrammatically the preferred form in which the hysteresis reducing winding is at right angles to the signaling and carrier current windings;
Fig. 2 illustrates a modification in which the carrier current windings are at right angles to the remaining windings; and
Fig. 3 shows details of the magnetic core construction.
In Fig. l of the drawing, the modulator M, which is of the magnetic type, is supplied with carrier currents from the source 3, which are to be modulated in accordance with signaling currents supplied by the signaling circuit at. The battery 5 supplies a steady current which brings the magnetization of the toroidal cores 6 and 7 to the desired point about which the magnetization is varied by the signaling currents. The source 8 supplies currents of a frequency higher than the carrier frequency supplied by the source 3 for the purpose of reducing the hysteresis. The circuit of source 8 may be traced from the source through the turns of coil 16 in series to conductor 28, through the turns of coil 15 in series, back to source 8.
The carrier source 3 supplies currents to the primary windings 9 and 10, which are individual to each of the cores 6 and 7, and which produce high frequency fluxes in opposite directions in these cores so that the signaling winding 11, which is common to both cores, is substantially non-inductively related to the windings 9 and 10. The opposing high frequency fluxes induce a resultant zero carrier frequency electromotive force in the signaling winding 11. The secondary windings 12 and 13 are adapted to supply modulated carrier currents to the radiating antenna system 14. The windings 12 and 13 are wound in opposite directions and areindividual to each of the cores 6 and 7. In order to reduce the hysteresis in the magnetic cores 6 and 7, means, such as the windings l5 and 16 disposed within the cores 6 and 7, are provided for producing a magnetic field which is at right angles to the magnetic field produced by signaling winding 11 and the windings 9, 1O, 13 and 12. The windings l5 and 16 are supplied by the source 8 with comparatively weak and very rapidly alternating currents, which have a frequency which is higher than that supplied by the carrier source 3. The signaling current supplied by the circuit 4 may be amplified, if desired, by one or more amplifiers 17 of the audion type.
The cores 6 and 7 may be constructed as shown in Fig. 3, in which the halves of the cores 18 and 19 which are suitably held in assembled position are preferably made of compressed iron dust, and are channeled to receive the Winding.
In Fig. 2 the antenna circuit may be traced from antenna 14 through the turns of the secondary Winding 22 in series to ground at 29. The carrier current source 3 is connected in series with primary winding 21. Windings 21 and 22 are both disposed within magnetic core 23. The low frequency winding 24 is wound around the core 23 so that the high frequency carrier current windings 21 and 22 produce magnetic fields which are at right angles to that produced by the signaling winding 24. The signaling winding 24 is non-inductively related to the carrier frequency windings 21 and 22 and the signaling winding 24 will accordingly not have any carrier frequency currents induced therein. This relative disposition of the carrier frequency winding and the signaling winding reduces the distortion as the molecules of the core are agitated by the magnetic field due to the carrier currents and are more readily suscep tible to changes in the field due to the signaling current. To reduce the hysteresis loss due to the carrier frequency alternating field in the core 23, the source 8, supplying a frequency higher than the carrier frequency, in this case is connected through condensers 25 and 26 about a portion 27 of the signaling winding 24. The rapidly alternating magnetic eld produced by the currents traversing the portion 27 of the winding 24 produces a field which is at right angles to the carrier frequency field so that the hysteresis is reduced, as in Fig. 1, by high frequency cross-magnetizing field.
It will be apparent that the windings 15 and 16 or 21 and 22 within the magnetic cores may be of iron, in which case the magnetic cores may be dispensed with, as the windings themselves would, in this case, provide the magnetizable means.
What is claimed is:
1. A high frequency signaling system comprising a modulator of the magnetic type having magnetizable means, means for supplying carrier currents for magnetizing said means, means for modulating said carrier currents, and means for reducing the hysteresis in said magnetizable'means.
2. A high frequency signaling system comprising magnetizable means, carrier current windings, and signaling windings associated with said magnetizable means, and
means acting upon the molecules of said magnetizing means for reducing its hysteresis.
3. A high frequency signaling system comprising a modulator of the magnetic type having magnetizable means, signaling cirmeans for supplying said magnetizable means with a rapidly alternating crossmagnetic field relative to the field produced by currents flowing in said carrier current windings.
5. A modulating system comprising a modulator of the magnetic type, means for supplying said modulator with (1) signaling currents, (2) currents of the carrier frequency and (3) currents of a frequency higher than said carrier frequency, and a high frequency line adapted to be supplied with modulated currents by said modulator.
6. A modulating system comprising the combination of magnetizable means, carrier current windings and signaling windings associated with said magnetizable means, said carrier current windings being noni'nduc-tively related to said signaling windings, and means for reducing hysteresis in said magnetizable means.
7. A modulating system comprising magnetizable means and four windings associated therewith, means for supplying signaling current to one of said windings, means for supplying currents of a carrier frequency to another of said windings, means for supplying current of a frequenc higher than sald. carrier frequency to a t ird winding, and a high frequency line adapted to be energized by said fourth winding.
8. A modulating system comprising magnetizable means, signaling windings and carrier current windings wound around said magnetizable means, and hysteresis reducing windings within said magnetizable means.
9. In a modulating system, the combination of two toroidal cores, a winding common to both of said cores, primary and secondary windings individual to each of said cores, and a winding within each of said cores.
10. A modulating system comprising the combination of two magnetic cores, a signaling winding common to both of said cores, carrier current primary and secondary windings individual to each of said cores, and hysteresis reducing windings within each of said cores.
11. In a modulating system, the combination of two magnetic cores, a signaling winding common to both of said cores, means for supplying signaling currents and a steady current to said signaling Winding, 13. The method of modulation which comprimary and secondary windings individual prises subjecting a carrier frequency current to each of said cores, means for supplying to the action of a magnetic impedance elego carrier currents to said primar windings, ment and subjecting the impedance element a high frequency line adapted to be enerto the action of an alternating flux of fregized by said secondary windings, other quency higher than that of said current.
windings Within each of said cores, and 14. A carrier frequency circuit, a signalmeans for supplying currents of a frequency ing frequency circuit, magnetic means asso- 25 higher than that of said carrier currents to ciated with both of said circuits, and means said other windings. for subjecting said magnetic means to the 12. In a modulating system a circuit inaction of an alternating flux of frequency eluding a sourceof carrier frequency oscilhigher than the carrier frequency.
lations, a magnetic device associated with In Witness whereof, I hereunto subscribe 30 said circuit, and means for subjecting said my name this 15th day of February, A. D.
magnetic device to the action of an alter- 9 7. I
hating flux having a frequency higher than that of said oscillations. RALPH V. L. HARTLEY.
US14897817A 1917-02-16 1917-02-16 Modulating system. Expired - Lifetime US1287982A (en)

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Cited By (27)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2704790A (en) * 1947-08-27 1955-03-22 Stromberg Carlson Co Reduction of noise level in magnetic recording systems by use of a.-c. bias and/or d.-c. correction of asymmetry
US2716736A (en) * 1949-12-08 1955-08-30 Harold B Rex Saturable reactor
US2776417A (en) * 1952-11-04 1957-01-01 Harris Transducer Corp Compensated winding
US2788500A (en) * 1952-03-07 1957-04-09 Charles F Gunderson Saturable reactor
US2802201A (en) * 1954-09-20 1957-08-06 Ampex Recording apparatus and system
US2805407A (en) * 1953-07-30 1957-09-03 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Magnetic register
US2832052A (en) * 1955-02-17 1958-04-22 Honeywell Regulator Co Magnetic product modulator
US2870416A (en) * 1953-03-26 1959-01-20 Honeywell Regulator Co Magnetic modulator
US2888637A (en) * 1955-03-17 1959-05-26 Sperry Rand Corp Radio frequency or carrier type transverse magnetic amplifier using squarewave power
US2917238A (en) * 1955-03-10 1959-12-15 Schlumberger Well Surv Corp Saturable reactor computer
US2948871A (en) * 1957-07-26 1960-08-09 United Transformer Corp Miniature inductive devices
US2976478A (en) * 1956-03-16 1961-03-21 Aske Vernon Harold Variable permeability magnetic circuit
US2987667A (en) * 1955-03-17 1961-06-06 Sperry Rand Corp Transverse magnetic amplifier
US3137823A (en) * 1961-11-30 1964-06-16 Cioccio Armand Magnetic amplifier
US3142047A (en) * 1960-12-14 1964-07-21 Columbia Broadcasting Systems Memory plane
US3204177A (en) * 1961-11-02 1965-08-31 Michel Adolf Keying devices, particularly for electrical musical instruments
US3210557A (en) * 1960-05-10 1965-10-05 Philips Corp Device for checking the presence or absence of a plurality of direct currents
US3334192A (en) * 1961-07-24 1967-08-01 Iit Res Inst Cross field magnetic transducer head
US3835430A (en) * 1968-09-20 1974-09-10 Transelektro Magyar Villamossa Tubular core electric transformer
US4210859A (en) * 1978-04-18 1980-07-01 Technion Research & Development Foundation Ltd. Inductive device having orthogonal windings
DE4035209A1 (en) * 1990-11-06 1992-05-07 Noszko Viktor Impedance converter for wideband transmission - has 2=part core wound with winding exhibiting required partial winding ratio
US5233324A (en) * 1992-03-26 1993-08-03 Eaton Corporation Current transformer for sensing current in an electrical conductor
US5450052A (en) * 1993-12-17 1995-09-12 Rockwell International Corp. Magnetically variable inductor for high power audio and radio frequency applications
US5517104A (en) * 1993-12-29 1996-05-14 Sumitomo Special Metals Co., Ltd. Lead wire DC current sensor with saturated detecting core
US5770982A (en) * 1996-10-29 1998-06-23 Sematech, Inc. Self isolating high frequency saturable reactor
US20050110605A1 (en) * 2001-11-21 2005-05-26 Magtech As Controllable transformer
WO2023235010A1 (en) 2022-06-03 2023-12-07 Apple Inc. Application vocabulary integration with a digital assistant

Cited By (28)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2704790A (en) * 1947-08-27 1955-03-22 Stromberg Carlson Co Reduction of noise level in magnetic recording systems by use of a.-c. bias and/or d.-c. correction of asymmetry
US2716736A (en) * 1949-12-08 1955-08-30 Harold B Rex Saturable reactor
US2788500A (en) * 1952-03-07 1957-04-09 Charles F Gunderson Saturable reactor
US2776417A (en) * 1952-11-04 1957-01-01 Harris Transducer Corp Compensated winding
US2870416A (en) * 1953-03-26 1959-01-20 Honeywell Regulator Co Magnetic modulator
US2805407A (en) * 1953-07-30 1957-09-03 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Magnetic register
US2802201A (en) * 1954-09-20 1957-08-06 Ampex Recording apparatus and system
US2832052A (en) * 1955-02-17 1958-04-22 Honeywell Regulator Co Magnetic product modulator
US2917238A (en) * 1955-03-10 1959-12-15 Schlumberger Well Surv Corp Saturable reactor computer
US2888637A (en) * 1955-03-17 1959-05-26 Sperry Rand Corp Radio frequency or carrier type transverse magnetic amplifier using squarewave power
US2987667A (en) * 1955-03-17 1961-06-06 Sperry Rand Corp Transverse magnetic amplifier
US2976478A (en) * 1956-03-16 1961-03-21 Aske Vernon Harold Variable permeability magnetic circuit
US2948871A (en) * 1957-07-26 1960-08-09 United Transformer Corp Miniature inductive devices
US3210557A (en) * 1960-05-10 1965-10-05 Philips Corp Device for checking the presence or absence of a plurality of direct currents
US3142047A (en) * 1960-12-14 1964-07-21 Columbia Broadcasting Systems Memory plane
US3334192A (en) * 1961-07-24 1967-08-01 Iit Res Inst Cross field magnetic transducer head
US3204177A (en) * 1961-11-02 1965-08-31 Michel Adolf Keying devices, particularly for electrical musical instruments
US3137823A (en) * 1961-11-30 1964-06-16 Cioccio Armand Magnetic amplifier
US3835430A (en) * 1968-09-20 1974-09-10 Transelektro Magyar Villamossa Tubular core electric transformer
US4210859A (en) * 1978-04-18 1980-07-01 Technion Research & Development Foundation Ltd. Inductive device having orthogonal windings
DE4035209A1 (en) * 1990-11-06 1992-05-07 Noszko Viktor Impedance converter for wideband transmission - has 2=part core wound with winding exhibiting required partial winding ratio
US5233324A (en) * 1992-03-26 1993-08-03 Eaton Corporation Current transformer for sensing current in an electrical conductor
US5450052A (en) * 1993-12-17 1995-09-12 Rockwell International Corp. Magnetically variable inductor for high power audio and radio frequency applications
US5517104A (en) * 1993-12-29 1996-05-14 Sumitomo Special Metals Co., Ltd. Lead wire DC current sensor with saturated detecting core
US5770982A (en) * 1996-10-29 1998-06-23 Sematech, Inc. Self isolating high frequency saturable reactor
US20050110605A1 (en) * 2001-11-21 2005-05-26 Magtech As Controllable transformer
US7061356B2 (en) * 2001-11-21 2006-06-13 Magtech As Controllable transformer
WO2023235010A1 (en) 2022-06-03 2023-12-07 Apple Inc. Application vocabulary integration with a digital assistant

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