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"Ron Baker, Pluralitas!" wrote: "isw" wrote in message ... In article , "Ron Baker, Pluralitas!" wrote: "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) Yes, and in fact, that multiplication referred to above creates a DSB-suppressed-carrier signal. To get "real" AM, you need to add back the carrier *at the proper phase*. So does the multiplication in the first example really make it amplitude modulation? Yes, because the output signal varies in amplitude with modulation. For suppressed carrier SSB or DSB, the output is zero when there's no modulating signal, while for "traditional AM", the output is 50% for no modulation. Compare to FM or PM, where the output is constant regardless of the modulation level. True, FM has a lot of sidebands that vary in amplitude, but if you add them all together, the output is constant. Run an SSB, DSB, or AM rig into a dummy load and it'll get hotter with modulation, while with FM the temperature won't change. -- But recall that if you take that DSB signal you got by multiplication, and reinject the carrier in quadrature, you no longer have amplitude modulation. Isaac |
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