Subelement F: Receivers— Topic 48: Detectors
Question 3-48F6
Element 3 (GROL)What is the definition of detection in a radio receiver?
Explanation
Detection, also known as demodulation, is the crucial process within a radio receiver that recovers the original information, or "intelligence," from the modulated radio frequency (RF) carrier wave. When a signal is transmitted, the information (like voice or data) is encoded onto a high-frequency carrier through modulation. The detector circuit at the receiver essentially "undoes" this modulation, extracting the original intelligence that was impressed on the carrier.
* **A) Masking out the intelligence** is incorrect. An S-meter measures signal strength, and the detection process is about *recovering* intelligence, not hiding it.
* **C) The modulation of a carrier** is the opposite process, performed by the transmitter to impress intelligence onto the carrier.
* **D) The mixing of noise** is an unwanted phenomenon that degrades reception, not the definition of how information is recovered.
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