CHAPTER 3 Amplitude Modulation Fundamentals
CHAPTER 3 Amplitude Modulation Fundamentals
CHAPTER 3
The carrier, which is normally a sine wave, is modulated by the baseband voice,
film, or digital signal during the modulation process. The intelligence signal may
modulate the amplitude, frequency, or phase of a sine wave carrier. The information
signal modulates the amplitude of the carrier sine wave in Amplitude Modulation (AM).
modulating signal's amplitude and frequency variations. By multiplying the carrier sine
wave by a gain or attenuation factor that varies according to the intelligence signal,
amplitude modulation can be achieved. Through linearly integrating the carrier and
intelligence signals and adding the effect to a nonlinear part or circuit, amplitude
resistors to combine the carrier and information signal linearly, a diode to rectify the
result, and a tuned circuit to finish the waveform. The precise structure of the
modulating information signal is determined by an imaginary line linking the positive and
negative peaks of the carrier waveform. The envelope is the imaginary line on the
carrier waveform.
The circuit that produces AM is known as a modulator. The carrier and the
modulating signal are its two inputs. The product of the carrier and modulating signals is
computed by amplitude modulators. Analog multipliers, mixers, converters, product
detectors, and phase detectors are all circuits that compute the product of two analog
the initial intelligence signal from an AM wave. The relationship between the modulating
signal's amplitude and the carrier signal's amplitude is crucial. The modulation index m
denotes this relationship (also called the modulating factor or coefficient, or the degree
modulating voltage's amplitude is greater than the carrier voltage's, m would be greater
than 1, allowing the modulated waveform to be distorted. A sine wave information signal
modulates a sine wave carrier, but the modulating voltage is significantly higher than the
carrier voltage, resulting in a state known as over modulation. It's difficult to avoid over
modulation. Normally, the modulating signal's amplitude is modified such that only the
voice peaks produce 100% modulation. Over modulation and distortion are avoided as
a result. Compression circuits are automatic circuits that address this issue by
a consequence, the total power output ratio is increased without over modulation. Over
are produced as part of the operation. These new frequencies, known as side
frequencies or sidebands, appear immediately above and below the carrier frequency in
the frequency continuum. The sidebands appear at frequencies that are the number and
variance of the carrier and modulating frequencies, in more detail. When a waveform
emit a wide range of sidebands. Complex signals, such as square waves, triangle
waves, saw tooth waves, and warped sine waves, are essentially made up of a
fundamental sine wave and various harmonic signals of varying amplitudes, according
rectangular binary pulses (ASK). When binary data must be exchanged, ASK is used in
certain forms of data exchange. By merely turning the carrier on and off, another crude
form of amplitude modulation may be done. The transmission of Morse code using dots
and dashes is an example. Continuous-wave (CW) transmissions are the most common
form of code transmission. ON/OFF keying is another name for this kind of transmission
(OOK). About the fact that only the carrier is broadcast, such ON/OFF signals produce
sidebands. The sidebands are caused by the pulses' frequency or repetition rate, as
well as their harmonics. Other signals can be present and interact with the harmonics if
they overlap into neighboring channels. Because of how it feels at the receiver, such
splatter can be quickly avoided by lowering the modulating signal's level with gain
characteristic impedance that is preferably, but not always, nearly pure resistance in
radio transmission. The AM signal is made up of many signal voltages, including the
carrier and two sidebands, each of which generates electricity in the antenna. Two-
thirds of the transmitted power in amplitude modulation is in the carrier, which carries no
detail. The sidebands are where the true knowledge is kept. Suppressing the carrier and
The carrier is suppressed first, leaving only the upper and lower sidebands to
is the name for this kind of signal. AM with no carrier is actually a special case of
The codes used to denote the various forms of signals that can be sent by radio or
cable. A capital letter and a number make up the standard code, with lowercase