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Since the reactance varies with frequency, we can use capacitors (or inductors) to filter out different frequencies. The voltage of the source is red, while the oscilloscope voltage is the blue plot on the graph (voltage is given in volts and time is given in seconds).
Capacitor filter: Try filter 1.
If it is bigger at higher frequencies, then it "allows" high frequencies through more readily than lower frequencies and it is called a high-pass filter. If it "allows" low frequencies through, it is a low-pass filter. Look at the circuit for filter 2.
Many signals are not simply made up of one single frequency. They are a combination of frequencies, and this is where filters are useful. Try a wave function composed of two different frequency waves with the low-pass filter. Try this wave function with the high-pass filter. (Note: You can not change the frequency of this wave function with the slider bar in this animation.)
Exploration authored by Anne J. Cox.
Script authored by Wolfgang Christian and Anne J. Cox.
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The complete version of Physlet Physics is available as a text with CD; Physlet Physics can be bundled with this Prentice Hall textbook.
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