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Speaking of AM modulation,, we all know that the carrier amplitude
does not change with modulation. Or does it? Here is a question that has plagued many for years: If you have a plate modulated transmitter, the plate voltage will swing down to zero and up to two times the plate voltage with 100% modulation. At 100% negative modulation the plate voltage is cutoff for the instant of the modulation negative peak. How is the carrier still transmitted during the time there is zero plate voltage? If we lower the modulation frequency to say 1 cps or even lower, 1 cycle per minute, then wouldn't the transmitter final be completely off for half that time and unable to produce any carrier output?? Question is, at what point does the carrier start to be effected? 73 Gary K4FMX On Wed, 22 Oct 2003 20:39:20 -0700, Roy Lewallen wrote: The amplitudes of the sideband components are symmetrical (at least for modulation by a single sine wave), but the phases aren't. The phases of all the upper sideband components are in phase with the carrier; in the lower sideband, the odd order components (and only the odd order ones) are reversed in phase. With multitone modulation, things get a whole lot more complex. Unlike AM, FM is nonlinear, so there are sideband components from each tone, plus components from their sum, difference, and harmonics. The inability to use superposition makes analysis of frequency modulation with complex waveforms a great deal more difficult than AM. Note also that unlike AM, whatever fraction of the carrier that's left when transmitting FM also contains part of the modulation information. Of course, at certain modulation indices with pure sine wave modulation, the carrier goes to zero, meaning that all the modulation information is in the sidebands. But this happens only under specific modulation conditions, so you'd certainly have an information-carrying carrier component present when modulating with a voice, for example. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Joel Kolstad wrote: Avery Fineman wrote: There isn't any corresponding similarity of FM and PM to AM for the repetition of sidebands' information when looking at the spectral content. Umm... last I looked the spectrum of FM and PM was symmetrical about the carrier frequency? (Well, the lower sideband is 180 degrees out of phase with the upper, but that's true of AM as well.) Looking at a single sine wave input to an FM or phase modulator, this comes about from the Bessel function expansion of the sidetones and J-n(x)=-Jn(x)? I know you're far more experienced in this area than I am, however, so I'll let you explain what I'm misinterpreting here! ---Joel Kolstad |
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