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by jcims 1055 days ago
>AC magic I suppose.

Yep. Think of a long pipe open on one end and capped on the other. If you seal the end with your mouth and blow, it will quickly pressurize. But if you seal a loudspeaker to it and sweep through the frequencies you will find that the loudness of the speaker varies proportionally to how close the tone is to a resonant frequency of the tube.

The elections in a monopole antenna have a sort of elastic relationship to one another where the influence propagates at the speed of light rather than the speed of sound. They are also able to move quite freely within the conductor like gas molecules in the tube. So if you have an antenna that’s two meters long and play a ‘tone’ with the equivalent of the loudspeaker at 150 million hz, the tube of electrons resonates.

Just like the atmosphere can couple resonant cavities of the same frequency, antennas are coupled by the electromagnetic field to resonate at the same frequency. This provides a certain ‘gain’ of the energy at the end of the ‘tube’ relative to other frequencies that aren’t resonant, which is what feeds our ears or amplifiers with something differentiable from the rest of the noise.

Now, imagine you have your ear glued to another tube just like the loudspeaker tube and your other ear is plugged. You’re going to hear the world around you, but it’s mostly going to be at harmonics of that resonant frequency. So when your buddy asks ‘can you hear me?’ a you get this really ringy ‘mwaa mwoo mwee mwee?’. Now imagine he turns on the speaker tube on the other side of the room? It’s going to brightly stand out among all of the other things you hear, ooooooooooooooooo.

Ok, now, he hands you a roll of paper and says draw along the roll relative to how loud it is. Up is louder down is softer, and he goes back and starts messing with the volume knob:

oooooOOOOOOoooo....oooooOOOoo..ooOoOo

The thing you draw on that roll of paper looks like a sound wave.

And now you know how AM radio works.