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Depends how big your bit is! The singularity where all your parameters are zero occurs exactly when the charge carrier is not moving.
You would need a rather long aerial(antenna), about 300000000000000000m long to get efficient radiation(dipole) and with that length conductivity would be a problem. That would give a radiation resistance of ~70ohms.
You did ask could such a low frequency be TRANSMITTED. That to me means the far field 1/r component. As an aerial(antenna) becomes electrically short it becomes harder to transmit energy efficiently as the radiation resistance falls and a capacitive reactive component becomes a real problem for impedance matching. Some submarine low frequency transmitters can have an output of 100Kw yet only manage an erp of 1Kw due to the inefficiency of a short aerial(antenna).
There's a standard FM radio with 100 MHz base frequency. Is there any physical constraints that prevent me from increasing the frequency by 1 nanoHertz?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 08/01/2025 06:48:42There's a standard FM radio with 100 MHz base frequency. Is there any physical constraints that prevent me from increasing the frequency by 1 nanoHertz? No.
Nobody ever said it was. Quantum events have specific associated frequencies but the em spectrum is a classical continuum.
Quote from: alancalverd on 28/12/2024 18:20:27Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 28/12/2024 11:56:41Can it detect photon in radio frequencies?Most radio frequencies are generated as a continuum but the RF signals from nuclear magnetic resonance and electron spin resonance relaxation are inherently quantised.What kind of quantization is it? Is the frequency quantized? Is the intensity quantized? Is the pulse width or duration quantized? Is the radiated energy quantized?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 28/12/2024 11:56:41Can it detect photon in radio frequencies?Most radio frequencies are generated as a continuum but the RF signals from nuclear magnetic resonance and electron spin resonance relaxation are inherently quantised.
Can it detect photon in radio frequencies?
All of the above.
As I said, the RF signal from quantum transitions is quantised.
For the nth time, em radiation from a quantum process such as an electron transition within an atom, or the disintegration of a nucleus, will have a specific energy and associated frequency.
You will only broaden the spectrum from a large sample by having an inhomogeneous field or an inhomogeneous sample (chemical shift). The gyromagnetic ratio of the proton is fixed.
As I have said many times. Wherever did you get the idea that it might be?