Appendix B: Glossary

TermDefinition
AmplitudeMaximum displacement of a wave from its rest position; directly related to the wave's energy.
AntennaA device that converts electrical signals into electromagnetic waves (transmitting) or electromagnetic waves into electrical signals (receiving).
Carrier waveA constant-frequency wave used to carry information by means of modulation.
CoherenceThe property of waves being in phase with each other, producing a stable interference pattern. Lasers produce highly coherent light.
DiffractionThe bending and spreading of waves when they encounter obstacles or pass through narrow openings.
Doppler effectThe change in observed frequency when a wave source and observer are moving relative to each other.
EM spectrumThe complete range of electromagnetic radiation, ordered by frequency from radio waves to gamma rays.
FrequencyThe number of complete wave cycles passing a point per second, measured in Hertz (Hz).
Hertz (Hz)The SI unit of frequency — one cycle per second. Named after Heinrich Hertz, who first demonstrated radio waves.
InterferenceThe phenomenon that occurs when two waves overlap, producing regions of reinforcement (constructive) or cancellation (destructive).
Ionizing radiationElectromagnetic radiation with enough energy per photon to remove electrons from atoms (X-rays and gamma rays).
MagnetronA vacuum tube that generates microwaves; the core component of microwave ovens and early radar systems.
ModulationThe process of encoding information onto a carrier wave by varying its amplitude (AM), frequency (FM), or phase (PM).
PhotonA single quantum (particle) of electromagnetic radiation. The energy of a photon is \(E = hf\).
PolarizationThe orientation of the electric field oscillation in an electromagnetic wave.
RefractionThe bending of waves when they pass from one medium into another with a different refractive index.
Refractive indexA measure of how much a material slows light relative to vacuum. Water has \(n \approx 1.33\), glass \(n \approx 1.5\), diamond \(n \approx 2.42\).
ResonanceThe tendency of a system to oscillate at maximum amplitude at certain natural frequencies. Radio tuning circuits exploit resonance.
Total internal reflectionThe complete reflection of light within a medium when it strikes the boundary at an angle shallower than the critical angle. The principle behind fiber optics.
TrilaterationA method of determining position by measuring distances from three or more known reference points. The basis of GPS.
WavelengthThe distance between two consecutive crests (or troughs) of a wave, typically denoted by \(\lambda\).