"And I kind of wonder if it is applicable to any Theremin circuit, because the antenna has to be a high impedance for the whole Theremin thing to work, but the only way a small C can form a high pass filter is if it "sees" a fairly low impedance." - Dewster
Yeah - I had similar ponderings some years ago - But I know that replacing my original large antenna series capacitor with a tiny one did make a huge difference to the SNR.. Sure, sensitivity was reduced, but LF sensitivity was reduced much more..
And I think it may work something like this..
think of the "background" capacitance as a plate connected to a "ground" that has a lot of LF ripple on it.. If one thinks about the cables carrying mains, one probably has a reasonably large percentage of the "ground" plate actually having 110/220V AC on it - possibly 10% or more of the total background "plate"..
Think of the player ideally being better coupled to a less noisy ground - they are hopefully not standing on a live-carrying cable, and are more likely to be capacitively coupled to a cleaner ground.
The small series capacitor acts to attenuate the LF from the background (or perhaps desensitise the background capacitance). If the player is well grounded, they will not be "carrying" much LF "on" them as they approach the antenna - Also, as the hand approaches the antenna, often there is greater hand coupling to the theremins clean 'internal' ground.
Within this hypothesis, high-pass filter operation is probably a less important function of the capacitor - but when one is talking about such low frequencies (rolloff) and such tiny capacitances, I still think that even with the high Z of the antenna, SOME effective HPF may also be working..
Who knows ;-) All I know is that this method got me out of trouble a few times.. What you say does beg some questions though.
Fred.
" I'm pretty sure I can see when my wife is walking around upstairs in the room above my workbench!"
LOL ;-) - Its spy stuff! Thats what the theremin was originally invented to do - detect people moving about in other rooms, bug embasies, that sort of thing .. Turning it into a musical instrument was just a way to get the spy into enemy territory ;-) The fact that some were gullible enough to actually believe it was a musical instrument...........
;-)
"People who make EEGs and such incorporate all of these methods to squash 60Hz hum."
Yes - but they have multiple signals to play with and compare.(monitoring biological signals and removing noise from these is a lot simpler than deriving changes of a few tens of femto Farads and keeping things clean .. I have done both! - well, at least I managed the bio monitoring - not so sure about the theremin.. ;-) The only thing which makes biological monitoring "trickier" is the safety issues.
I only really had problems with 50Hz when I had low voltage on the sensors - Originally I had <2V P-P, and it was hopeless, even adding a C never helped - Then I went up to 10V P-P and the C made results almost acceptable (this was with my Epsilon instrument) - But all theremins I have built since have had >20V p-p and I havent had any problems with any topology (I have fitted a small antenna C to everything without thinking about it - they may not be needed anymore) - My H1's never had a problem even with high power spotlights being moved close (just needed a to tune them by screw adjusting antenna length to compensate for the changed capacitance) The EW has no small antenna C, did you notice any mains noise on it? I havent noticed any extensive reference to a problem with mains FM on theremins..
"Though there may be some value in letting the antenna "float" up to the voltage potential found at that height off the earth."
Are you referring to the fact that the potential increases the higher one goes up? - My understanding of this is that the electrosphere can be regarded as a +Ve charged spherical plate encompassing the earth, with earth being the other -Ve "plate, and air being the dielectric seperating these plates..
Any enclosed containment (building or whatever) which has any quantity of grounded stuff in it, can be regarded as at ground potential for all practical purposes - even trees tend to extend the area of earths plate ... Yes, there is higher +Ve potential as une goes above sea level, but if the theremin is connected to the local ground, I believe the potential difference between this ground and the air the antenna is in is likely to be trivial.. Certainly nothing like the 100V/m that the potential increases if you are not connected to ground.
Even the highest impedence antenna is low Z compared to the impedence of the dielectric we are swimming in - and the Z of grounded equipment / walls / trees etc is so low that one can ignore the potential gradient if one is close to any of these.
I had great problems trying to "capture" this gradient when doing research in this field - Needed long insulated poles that were placed on the top of hills so the 'collector' was way above the altitude of any tree tops.
"Another thing I see with the series C is a fairly long settling time before the frequency is really stable."
I dont see how adding a series C can cause this - Is this perhaps due to the oscillator frequency being higher as a result of the lower (total) antenna capacitance?.. What happens if you add a small capacitor to ground before the series C, to drop the oscillator frequency?
It may just be that the oscillator requires more time to get stable the higher its frequency is..