While reading about frequency modulation, I found that it was clearly written that the amplitude of the carrier wave remains unchanged. However, i didn't find a statement stating that the frequency of the carrier wave remains unchanged for amplitude modulation. So, is the frequency of the carrier wave changed during amplitude modulation? Also, please explain the relation between the frequency of the modulated wave and the frequency of the information signal (the sidebands confused me)
1) Not only is the amplitude of an FM signal theoretically constant, additional stabilising circuitry is employed to keep it so in better equipment.
2) When amplitude modulation is employed, 2 new frequencies appear, that were not in either the original carrier or the modulating signal. These are called sidebands. I don't know if you have studied yet beats in physics but this is the same phenomenon. When two waves of nearly equal frequency combine, beats occur at the difference between their frequencies. You can here this in the thrumming of engines in an enclosed space, and the beat occurs in the audio spectrum.
With radio transmission the modulating audio signal and the carrier frequencies are quite different so the effect is given a different name.
The amplitude (the quantity we wish to vary) of the carrier is
v = {V_c}\sin \left( {{\omega _c}t} \right)
If we
add a modulating signal to V
c this becomes
v = \left( {{V_c} + {V_m}\sin \left( {{\omega _m}t} \right)} \right)\sin \left( {{\omega _c}t} \right)
A bit of trigonometry turns this into
v = {V_c}\sin \left( {{\omega _c}t} \right) + \frac{{{V_m}}}{2}\cos \left( {{\omega _c} - {\omega _m}} \right)t - \frac{{{V_m}}}{2}\cos \left( {{\omega _c} + {\omega _m}} \right)t
This shows that a sinusoidal wave, sinusoidally modulated contains three frequencies.
The original carrier
{f_c} = {\omega _c}/2\pi
The lower side frequency or sideband
{f_c} - {f_m} = \left( {{\omega _c} - {\omega _m}} \right)/2\pi
the upper side frequency or sideband
{f_c} + {f_m} = \left( {{\omega _c} + {\omega _m}} \right)/2\pi
The modulating frequency
is not present.
It is worth noting that amplitude modulation represents addition of two waves, frequency modulation represents multiplication.
go well