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In rec.radio.amateur.antenna Radium wrote:
On Jun 17, 4:05 pm, wrote: So at any given time, you need some number of photons at different frequencies to get the frequency components and some number of photons at each frequency component to the the amplitude components of the total signal. Well, in FM the peak-to-peak amplitude remains constant but the energy [frequency] varies. In AM, the frequency remains constant but the peak to peak amplitude varies. You've never seen what an AM signal looks like on a spectrum analyzer, have you? Go look at: http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/navy/docs/es310/AM.htm Hot flash for you, the AM modulation process creates other frequencies. If you only have one frequency, you don't have modulation of any kind. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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