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- Sideband abstract "In radio communications, a sideband is a band of frequencies higher than or lower than the carrier frequency, containing power as a result of the modulation process. The sidebands consist of all the Fourier components of the modulated signal except the carrier. All forms of modulation produce sidebands.Amplitude modulation of a carrier wave normally results in two mirror-image sidebands. The signal components above the carrier frequency constitute the upper sideband (USB), and those below the carrier frequency constitute the lower sideband (LSB). In conventional AM transmission, the carrier and both sidebands are present, sometimes called double sideband amplitude modulation (DSB-AM).In some forms of AM, the carrier may be removed, producing double sideband with suppressed carrier (DSB-SC). An example is the stereophonic difference (L-R) information transmitted in stereo FM broadcasting on a 38 kHz subcarrier. The receiver locally regenerates the subcarrier by doubling a special 19 kHz pilot tone, but in other DSB-SC systems, the carrier may be regenerated directly from the sidebands by a Costas loop or squaring loop. This is common in digital transmission systems such as BPSK where the signal is continually present.If part of one sideband and all of the other remain, it is called vestigial sideband, used mostly with television broadcasting, which would otherwise take up an unacceptable amount of bandwidth. Transmission in which only one sideband is transmitted is called single-sideband transmission or SSB. SSB is the predominant voice mode on shortwave radio other than shortwave broadcasting. Since the sidebands are mirror images, which sideband is used is a matter of convention. In amateur radio, LSB is traditionally used below 10 MHz and USB is used above 10 MHz. In SSB, the carrier is suppressed, significantly reducing the electrical power (by up to 12 dB) without affecting the information in the sideband. This makes for more efficient use of transmitter power and RF bandwidth, but a beat frequency oscillator must be used at the receiver to reconstitute the carrier. Another way to look at an SSB receiver is as an RF-to-audio frequency transposer: in USB mode, the dial frequency is subtracted from each radio frequency component to produce a corresponding audio component, while in LSB mode each incoming radio frequency component is subtracted from the dial frequency. Sidebands can also interfere with adjacent channels. The part of the sideband that would overlap the neighboring channel must be suppressed by filters, before or after modulation (often both). In Broadcast band frequency modulation (FM), subcarriers above 75 kHz are limited to a small percentage of modulation and are prohibited above 99 kHz altogether to protect the ±75 kHz normal deviation and ±100 kHz channel boundaries. Amateur radio and public service FM transmitters generally utilize ±5 kHz deviation.".
- Sideband thumbnail Am-sidebands.png?width=300.
- Sideband wikiPageID "41701".
- Sideband wikiPageLength "4721".
- Sideband wikiPageOutDegree "50".
- Sideband wikiPageRevisionID "663159637".
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Adjacent_channel.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Amateur_radio.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Amplitude_modulation.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink BPSK.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Band_(radio).
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Bandwidth_(signal_processing).
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Beat_frequency_oscillator.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Broadcast_band.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Broadcasting.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Carrier_signal.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Carrier_wave.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Category:Amateur_radio.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Channel_(communications).
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Costas_loop.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Electric_power.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink FM_broadcasting.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Filter_(signal_processing).
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Fourier_analysis.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Frequencies.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Frequency.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Frequency_deviation.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Frequency_modulation.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Hertz.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Independent_sideband.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Interference_(communication).
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink KHz.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Modulation.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Out-of-band_data.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Percent.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Percentage.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Phase-shift_keying.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Pilot_signal.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Radio.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Radio_spectrum.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Receiver_(radio).
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Reduced-carrier_transmission.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Shortwave.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Shortwave_radio.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Side_lobe.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Sideband_computing.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Single-sideband_modulation.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Single-sideband_transmission.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Squaring_loop.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Stereophonic.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Stereophonic_sound.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Subcarrier.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Suppressed_carrier.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink TV_transmitter.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Television.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Television_transmitter.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Transmission_(telecommunications).
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink Transposition_(music).
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink United_States_Department_of_the_Army.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink File:AM_signal.jpg.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLink File:Am-sidebands.png.
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLinkText "Double Sideband Suppressed Carrier".
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLinkText "LSB".
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLinkText "SSB".
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLinkText "Sideband".
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLinkText "USB".
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLinkText "Upper Sideband".
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLinkText "either side".
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLinkText "side band".
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLinkText "sideband".
- Sideband wikiPageWikiLinkText "single-sideband".
- Sideband hasPhotoCollection Sideband.
- Sideband wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Sideband wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:FS1037C_MS188.
- Sideband wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:No_footnotes.
- Sideband wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Ref_improve.
- Sideband wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Sideband wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Telecommunications.
- Sideband subject Category:Amateur_radio.
- Sideband hypernym Band.
- Sideband type Article.
- Sideband type Band.
- Sideband type Article.
- Sideband type Source.
- Sideband type Thing.
- Sideband comment "In radio communications, a sideband is a band of frequencies higher than or lower than the carrier frequency, containing power as a result of the modulation process. The sidebands consist of all the Fourier components of the modulated signal except the carrier. All forms of modulation produce sidebands.Amplitude modulation of a carrier wave normally results in two mirror-image sidebands.".
- Sideband label "Sideband".
- Sideband sameAs Sidebånd.
- Sideband sameAs Seitenband.
- Sideband sameAs Banda_laterale.
- Sideband sameAs m.0bg8m.
- Sideband sameAs Боковая_полоса_частот.
- Sideband sameAs Q2267009.
- Sideband sameAs Q2267009.
- Sideband wasDerivedFrom Sideband?oldid=663159637.
- Sideband depiction Am-sidebands.png.
- Sideband isPrimaryTopicOf Sideband.