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The picture of "noise" tells us nothing - other than 10khz is down 30db
from carrier. Were it relative to something - that would tell us much. As it is - it just shows an unknown spectrum of ???? Put a reference in there (or a known weighted/gated noise source such as specified by NRSC - like a BruelKjar or equiv.) THEN you can make some solid deductions. That spectrum was taken during a quiet piano passage with background noise. The piano, played softly, had little treble, so the spectrum above about 3 kHz is the product of the program noise spectrum, and the spectral response of the station, which includes playback electronics, processor, transmitter, and antenna. The dominant spectral feature of the station's frequency response is the processor preemphasis. If the noise spectrum is flat, what you see in the screen shot is the preemphasis curve. Its absolute level reflects the level of the background noise, which isn't relevant. But the shape is. The curve shown is typical of the spectral response you'd expect to see for a preemphasized AM transmitter. The key point is that it stops suddenly at 10 kHz, not somewhere below. All of the spectra I've shown do the same. (The spectra of the two Mexican signals stop at 8 kHz.) Here's a final screen shot: http://n2.net/k6sti/am1210.jpg . This is nearby station at 1210 kHz that was broadcasting a live announcer from a local studio at the time I recorded the spectrum. The carrier is at the left edge of the screen, the center of the screen is 1220 kHz, and the horizontal scale is 2 kHz/div. This image shows the upper sideband in some detail. If you were designing a high-performance AM receiver, what IF passband would you use to fully recover the modulation from this signal? Brian |
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