Originally posted by Tinkerer
View Post
My feeling is that if we had a really decent math model of a target, we should be able to answer a lot of these interesting questions. I think the coil magnetic field is pretty well understood because we can measure the voltage and current fairly well and it's pretty linear. But the target is harder to measure.
First of all, is a target "linear" or non-linear? Is skin effect non-linear? I ask the question because non-linear systems are really hard to get a handle on -- hitting them hard is different from hitting them soft, they don't scale.
But my basic question is: can't we treat this discussion like any other electronic circuit -- write a differential equation for the response to a stimulus of our choice and run it out? We throw around ideas like "saturation" etc., but these should show up in our equations.
If targets are "linear" in terms of response, then a lot of stuff should be well understood. For instance, response to an impulse (PI TX pulse) and to a sine wave (VLF TX signal ) are completely related - you know one, you know the other (of course you need all sine waves...). And it's no big deal to take a specific pulse shape and run it through a computer program and see the response and answer the question of how best to sample the PI response.
So it seems like we need to get a really good model of some targets and get running some simulations. Aziz, are you available?
Now if it doesn't match real life, good. More work is need on the models. Once you can match reality, you can understand what's going on.
I suggest this because one man's saturation may be another man's steady state -- loose terms that are misleading unless we tie them to an equation.
I'm not saying stop talking with analogies, it's fun, I'll keep doing it too. But it seems we go in circles because we don't have a common language to nail down conclusions. Unfortunately, that language is mathematical models.
I'd like to start with the concept of "saturation" of targets, and ask what is really meant by that and what analogy is behind it?
Cheers,
-SB
Comment