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Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Sat, 13 Sep 2008 08:42:53 +0100, Ian Thompson-Bell wrote: Green Xenon [Radium] wrote: Hi: What would be heard on a 40 Hz AM DX receiver that uses the most sensitive type of magnetic loop antenna? I doubt there would be any hissing since that artifact would involve high-frequency sounds and a 40 Hz carrier cannot transport modulation-signals higher than 40 Hz [violation of Nyquist theorem]. Not strictly true I think - depends on the modulation scheme - how else do you think we manage to get 56K bps down a 3KHz phone line. Ummm... Mr Radium clearly specified that he's using AM as in amplitude modulation. If there were a different method of modulation employed, methinks he would have specified it. You can get more bits per baud out of relatively narrow bandwidths. The various HDRadio schemes: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HD_Radio are good examples with about 40Kbits/sec in a 9KHz bandwidth. However, they don't use AM. Depends on your definition of AM. There are many types of amplitude modulation, ask any radio amateur - and then of course there's VPAM. Cheers Ian |
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