"John Fields" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 5 Jul 2007 00:00:45 -0700, "Ron Baker, Pluralitas!"
snip
When AM is correctly accomplished (a single voiceband signal is
modulated
The questions I posed were not about AM. The
subject could have been viewed as DSB but that
wasn't the specific intent either.
What was the subject of your question?
Copying from my original post:
Suppose you have a 1 MHz sine wave whose amplitude
is multiplied by a 0.1 MHz sine wave.
What would it look like on an oscilloscope?
What would it look like on a spectrum analyzer?
Then suppose you have a 1.1 MHz sine wave added
to a 0.9 MHz sine wave.
What would that look like on an oscilloscope?
What would that look like on a spectrum analyzer?
---
The first example is amplitude modulation precisely _because_ of the
Is there multiplication in DSB? (double sideband)
multiplication, while the second is merely the algebraic summation
of the instantaneous amplitudes of two waveforms.
The circuit lists I posted earlier will, when run using LTSPICE,
I think you did
(sin[] + 1) * (sin[] + 1)
not
sin() * sin()
show exactly what the signals will look like using an oscilloscope
and, using the "FFT" option on the "VIEW" menu, give you a pretty
good approximation of what they'll look like using a spectrum
analyzer.
If you don't have LTSPICE it's available free at:
http://www.linear.com/designtools/software/
Yes, I have LTSPICE. It is pretty good.
--
JF