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frequency modulation
frequency modulation
noun
- a method of transmitting information using a radio-frequency carrier wave. The frequency of the carrier wave is varied in accordance with the amplitude and polarity of the input signal, the amplitude of the carrier remaining unchanged FM Compare amplitude modulation
frequency modulation
- A method of transmitting signals, especially in radio broadcasting, in which the value of the signal is given by the frequency of a high frequency carrier wave. In FM radio transmission, for example, the signal to be carried is a sound wave, and its increasing and decreasing value is reflected in the increasing and decreasing frequency of a radio frequency carrier wave.
- Compare amplitude modulation
frequency modulation
- A type of radio signal in which the frequency of the radio wave is varied to carry information from the transmitter to the receiver. ( Compare amplitude modulation (AM).)
Word History and Origins
Origin of frequency modulation1
Example Sentences
The difference between AM, or amplitude modulation, and FM, or frequency modulation, involves how sound waves are encoded into a signal that can be picked up by receivers.
In his “Bird Concerto,” sampled birdsong mingles with music that mimics the sonic signatures of our feathered friends, but also the “quasi-electronic frequency modulation” of their cries.
One signal unravelled into a sensible pattern associated with frequency modulation in the thousands of kilohertz — sound, I surmised.
This identity is encoded in a specific frequency modulation pattern that the dolphin learns as a calf and keeps throughout its life.
Utilities typically leveraged one-way paging frequency modulation communications to send signals to these switches to turn off for a short time to reduce load.
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