Ok, so not everyone here is a E.E.
Let me rephrase.
The transmitter sends a pulse of current to the transmit coil at some given repetition rate.
The energy in that current pulse can be mathematically described as a set of many different frequencies.
The lowest frequency and the one that has the most energy is called the fundamental and it is equal to the
pulse repetition rate. In this case, 1.5 KHz (or 1,500 cycles per second).
The other frequencies are called harmonics and are multiples of the 1.5KHz. For example, 3KHz, 4.5KHz, ....
The hooker is that as the harmonic frequencies get higher, the amount of energy in them decreases. As everyone
here knows, the lower frequencies are hot on silver and the higher frequencies are hot on gold (that is why gold
machines usually run at higher frequencies), so this tends to comensate the fact that the detector is transmitting the higher frequencies with lower energies.
Most detectors analyze the target in what is called the time domain. In other words, a pulse is transmitted, this induces a current in the target and depending on the conductivity of the target, this induced current decays at some rate. The net effect is that this changes the signal received by the received coil and detection is made.
What makes the Minelab unique is that instead of analyzing the target decay response in time, it is looking at the decay response at several of the frequency components that the transmit coil generated (remember Fourier?). The claim is
that this provides a more accurate and deeper assessment because different targets will react differently.
Hope this was a little easier.