I was just wondering the following. Please excuse my crude language, I'll try to be as accurate as I can.
Now let's say I have an input signal. I tune this to an LC circuit. Giving me my signal generator, a capacitor and an inductor. I simplify a lot and say my inductor is actually a dipole antenna. Now as it's a tuned resonance circuit, I have a resonance transmitter. Nothing fancy, that's as far as I know state of the art RF stuff.
Next at the receiver end, I have the same antenna, and the same LC circuit. But there's nothing connected to it. So basically the receiver capacitor get's charged by the inductor due to the incoming signal, and then discharges into the same inductor, basically sending the wave back. Kinda like reflecting, but it's more a copy, a phase shifted one.
Now at some point in time, this wave from the receiver will hit the transmitter again.
And now I'm just wondering, what can we get, if we tuned the entire setup (the distance between transmitter and receiver, the frequency of the LC curcuit in relation to the distance and phase shift) to have it resonate not only in the LC curcuits but also in the Receiver and Transmitter?
Mathematically it seems to be easy, yet it's function within function, pretty interdepending. I just cannot solve that, not even with the AI.