Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ron Baker, Pluralitas! wrote:
What is the difference between AM and DSB? The two actually describe different properties, so a signal can be be AM, DSB, neither, or both. And here we run into some trouble between technical correctness and common usage. DSB stands for Double SideBand. Although I suppose an FM signal could be called DSB because it has two *sets* of sidebands, and a narrowband FM signal has only one significant pair like an AM signal, in my experience the term DSB virtually always refers to a signal generated by amplitude modulation. AM is Amplitude Modulation. Straightforward amplitude modulation such as done for AM broadcasting produces a carrier and two sidebands, or DSB with carrier. Either the carrier or one sideband, or both, can be suppressed. If you suppress the carrier (or don't generate it in the first place), you get DSB with suppressed carrier, or DSB-SC. If you suppress one sideband, you get SSB. Usually, but not always, the carrier is also suppressed along with the one sideband, resulting in SSB-SC. NTSC television transmission is VSB -- AM with a carrier and "vestigial" or partially suppressed sideband and a full second sideband. Partial suppression of the carrier is also done for some broadcast purposes. So a commercial AM broadcast station broadcasts a signal that's both AM and DSB. A typical amateur or military SSB transmission is AM but not DSB. A QPSK signal is neither. And, as I mentioned, some signals like FM could be considered DSB but not AM (although this isn't common usage). In common amateur parlance, however, "AM" usually means AM with two sidebands and carrier. "DSB" usually means AM with two sidebands and suppressed carrier "SSB" usually means AM with a single sideband and suppressed carrier Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|