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Radio receiver

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromRadio receivers)
Device for receiving radio transmissions
A moderncommunications receiver, used intwo-way radio communication stations to talk with remote locations byshortwave radio.

Inradio communications, aradio receiver, also known as areceiver, awireless, or simply aradio, is an electronic device that receivesradio waves and converts the information carried by them to a usable form. It is used with anantenna. The antenna intercepts radio waves (electromagnetic waves ofradio frequency) and converts them to tinyalternating currents which are applied to the receiver, and the receiver extracts the desired information. The receiver useselectronic filters to separate the desiredradio frequency signal from all the other signals picked up by the antenna, anelectronic amplifier to increase the power of the signal for further processing, and finally recovers the desired information throughdemodulation.

Radio receivers are essential components of all systems based onradio technology. The information produced by the receiver may be in the form of sound, video (television), ordigital data.[1] A radio receiver may be a separate piece of electronic equipment, or anelectronic circuit within another device. The most familiar type of radio receiver for most people is abroadcast radio receiver, which reproduces sound transmitted byradio broadcasting stations, historically the first mass-market radio application. A broadcast receiver is commonly called a "radio". However radio receivers are very widely used in other areas of modern technology, intelevisions,cell phones,wireless modems,radio clocks and other components of communications, remote control, and wireless networking systems.

Applications

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See also:Radio § Applications

Broadcasting

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Broadcast audio reception

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This section is an excerpt fromBroadcast radio receiver.[edit]
A portable battery-powered AM/FM broadcast receiver, used to listen to audio broadcast by localradio stations.
The most familiar form of radio receiver is abroadcast radio receiver, often just called a broadcast receiver or simply a radio, as used forradio broadcasting. It receivesaudio programs intended for public reception transmitted by localradio stations. The sound is reproduced either by aloudspeaker in the radio or anearphone which plugs into a jack on the radio. The radio requireselectric power, provided either bybatteries inside the radio or a power cord which plugs into anelectric outlet. All radios have avolume control to adjust the loudness of the audio, and some type of "tuning" control to select the radio station to be received.

Broadcast television reception

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Main article:Television

Televisions receive avideo signal representing a moving image, composed of a sequence of still images, and a synchronizedaudio signal representing the associated sound. Thetelevision channel received by a TV occupies a widerbandwidth than an audio signal, from 600 kHz to 6 MHz.

Voice communications

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Two-way voice communications

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Main article:Two-way radio

Atwo-way radio is an audiotransceiver, a receiver andtransmitter in the same device, used for bidirectional person-to-person voice communication. The radio link may behalf-duplex, using a single radio channel in which only one radio can transmit at a time. so different users take turns talking, pressing apush to talk button on their radio which switches on the transmitter. Or the radio link may befull duplex, a bidirectional link using two radio channels so both people can talk at the same time, as in a cell phone.

    • Cellphone - a portabletelephone that is connected to thetelephone network by radio signals exchanged with a local antenna called acell tower. Cellphones have highly automated digital receivers working in the UHF and microwave band that receive the incoming side of theduplex voice channel, as well as a control channel that handles dialing calls and switching the phone between cell towers. They usually also have several other receivers that connect them with other networks: aWiFi modem, abluetooth modem, and aGPS receiver. The cell tower has sophisticated multichannel receivers that receive the signals from many cell phones simultaneously.
    • Cordless phone - alandline telephone in which thehandset is portable and communicates with the rest of the phone by a short rangeduplex radio link, instead of being attached by a cord. Both the handset and thebase station have radio receivers operating in theUHF band that receive the short range bidirectionalduplex radio link.
    • Citizens band radio - a two-way half-duplex radio operating in the 27 MHz band that can be used without a license. They are often installed in vehicles and used by truckers and delivery services.
    • Walkie-talkie - a handheld short range half-duplex two-way radio.
    • Handheld scanner
      Scanner - a receiver that continuously monitors multiple frequencies orradio channels by stepping through the channels repeatedly, listening briefly to each channel for a transmission. When a transmitter is found the receiver stops at that channel. Scanners are used to monitor emergency police, fire, and ambulance frequencies, as well as other two way radio frequencies such ascitizens band. Scanning capabilities have also become a standard feature in communications receivers, walkie-talkies, and other two-way radios.
    • Modern communications receiver, ICOM RC-9500
      Communications receiver orshortwave receiver - a general purpose audio receiver covering theLF,MF,shortwave (HF), andVHF bands. Used mostly with a separate shortwave transmitter for two-way voice communication in communication stations,amateur radio stations, and forshortwave listening.

One-way voice communications

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    • Wireless microphone receiver - these receive the short range signal fromwireless microphones used onstage by musical artists, public speakers, and television personalities.
    • Baby monitor. The receiver is on the left
      Baby monitor - this is a cribside appliance for parents of infants that transmits the baby's sounds to a receiver carried by the parents, so they can monitor the baby while they are in other parts of the house. Many baby monitors now have video cameras to show a picture of the baby.

Data communication

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Other applications

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  • Radiolocation - This is the use of radio waves to determine the location or direction of an object.
    • Radar - a device that transmits a narrow beam of microwaves which reflect from a target back to a receiver, used to locate objects such as aircraft, spacecraft, missiles, ships or land vehicles. The reflected waves from the target are received by a receiver usually connected to the same antenna, indicating the direction to the target. Widely used in aviation, shipping, navigation, weather forecasting, space flight, vehiclecollision avoidance systems, and the military.
    • Global navigation satellite system (GNSS) receiver, such as aGPS receiver used with the USGlobal Positioning System - the most widely used electronic navigation device. An automated digital receiver that receives simultaneous data signals from several satellites in low Earth orbit. Using extremely precise time signals it calculates the distance to the satellites, and from this the receiver's location on Earth. GNSS receivers are sold as portable devices, and are also incorporated in cell phones, vehicles and weapons, evenartillery shells.
    • VOR receiver - navigational instrument on an aircraft that uses the VHF signal fromVOR navigational beacons between 108 and 117.95 MHz to determine the direction to the beacon very accurately, for air navigation.
    • Wild animal tracking receiver - a receiver with a directional antenna used to track wild animals which have been tagged with a small VHF transmitter, forwildlife management purposes.
  • Other

Principles

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Symbol for an antenna

A radio receiver is connected to anantenna which converts some of the energy from the incoming radio wave into a tinyradio frequency ACvoltage which is applied to the receiver's input. An antenna typically consists of an arrangement of metal conductors. The oscillatingelectric andmagnetic fields of the radio wave push theelectrons in the antenna back and forth, creating an oscillating voltage.

Theantenna may be enclosed inside the receiver's case, as with theferrite loop antennas ofAM radios and the flatinverted F antenna of cell phones; attached to the outside of the receiver, as withwhip antennas used onFM radios, or mounted separately and connected to the receiver by a cable, as with rooftoptelevision antennas andsatellite dishes.

Practical radio receivers perform three basic functions on the signal from the antenna:filtering,amplification, anddemodulation:[2]

Reception

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Thesignal strength of radio waves decreases the farther they travel from the transmitter, so a radio station can only be received within a limited range of its transmitter. The range depends on the power of the transmitter, the sensitivity of the receiver, atmospheric and internalnoise, as well as any geographical obstructions such as hills between transmitter and receiver. AM broadcast band radio waves travel asground waves which follow the contour of the Earth, so AM radio stations can be reliably received at hundreds of miles distance. Due to their higher frequency, FM band radio signals cannot travel far beyond the visual horizon; limiting reception distance to about 40 miles (64 km), and can be blocked by hills between the transmitter and receiver. However FM radio is less susceptible to interference fromradio noise (RFI,sferics, static) and has higherfidelity; betterfrequency response and lessaudio distortion, than AM. So in countries that still broadcast AM radio, serious music is typically only broadcast by FM stations, and AM stations specialize inradio news,talk radio, andsports radio. Like FM, DAB signals travel byline of sight so reception distances are limited by the visual horizon to about 30–40 miles (48–64 km).

Bandpass filtering

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Main article:Bandpass filter
Symbol for a bandpass filter used inblock diagrams of radio receivers

Radio waves from many transmitters pass through the air simultaneously without interfering with each other and are received by the antenna. These can be separated in the receiver because they have differentfrequencies; that is, the radio wave from each transmitter oscillates at a different rate. To separate out the desired radio signal, thebandpass filter allows the frequency of the desired radio transmission to pass through, and blocks signals at all other frequencies.

The bandpass filter consists of one or moreresonant circuits (tuned circuits). The resonant circuit is connected between the antenna input and ground. When the incoming radio signal is at the resonant frequency, the resonant circuit has high impedance and the radio signal from the desired station is passed on to the following stages of the receiver. At all other frequencies the resonant circuit has low impedance, so signals at these frequencies are conducted to ground.

  • Bandwidth and selectivity: See graphs. The information (modulation) in a radio transmission is contained in two narrow bands of frequencies calledsidebands(SB) on either side of thecarrier frequency(C), so the filter has to pass a band of frequencies, not just a single frequency. The band of frequencies received by the receiver is called itspassband(PB), and the width of the passband inkilohertz is called thebandwidth(BW). The bandwidth of the filter must be wide enough to allow the sidebands through without distortion, but narrow enough to block any interfering transmissions on adjacent frequencies (such asS2 in the diagram). The ability of the receiver to reject unwanted radio stations near in frequency to the desired station is an important parameter calledselectivity determined by the filter. In modern receiversquartz crystal,ceramic resonator, orsurface acoustic wave (SAW) filters are often used which have sharper selectivity compared to networks of capacitor-inductor tuned circuits.
  • Tuning: To select a particular station the radio is "tuned" to the frequency of the desired transmitter. The radio has a dial or digital display showing the frequency it is tuned to.Tuning is adjusting the frequency of the receiver's passband to the frequency of the desired radio transmitter. Turning the tuning knob changes theresonant frequency of thetuned circuit. When the resonant frequency is equal to the radio transmitter's frequency the tuned circuit oscillates in sympathy, passing the signal on to the rest of the receiver.
Thefrequency spectrum of a typical radio signal from an AM or FM radio transmitter. It consists of a component (C) at thecarrier wave frequencyfC, with the modulation contained in narrow frequency bands calledsidebands (SB) just above and below the carrier.
How the bandpass filter selects a single radio signalS1 from all the radio signalsS2, S3 ... received by the antenna. From top, the graphs show the voltage from the antenna applied to the filterVin, thetransfer function of the filterT, and the voltage at the output of the filterVout as a function of frequencyf. The transfer functionT is the amount of signal that gets through the filter at each frequency:
Vout(f)=T(f)Vin(f){\displaystyle V_{\text{out}}(f)={\text{T}}(f)V_{\text{in}}(f)}

Amplification

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Main article:Amplifier
Symbol for anamplifier

The power of the radio waves picked up by a receiving antenna decreases with the square of its distance from the transmitting antenna. Even with the powerful transmitters used in radio broadcasting stations, if the receiver is more than a few miles from the transmitter the power intercepted by the receiver's antenna is very small, perhaps as low aspicowatts orfemtowatts. To increase the power of the recovered signal, anamplifier circuit uses electric power from batteries or the wall plug to increase theamplitude (voltage or current) of the signal. In most modern receivers, the electronic components which do the actual amplifying aretransistors.

Receivers usually have several stages of amplification: the radio signal from the bandpass filter is amplified to make it powerful enough to drive the demodulator, then the audio signal from the demodulator is amplified to make it powerful enough to operate the speaker. The degree of amplification of a radio receiver is measured by a parameter called itssensitivity, which is the minimum signal strength of a station at the antenna, measured inmicrovolts, necessary to receive the signal clearly, with a certainsignal-to-noise ratio. Since it is easy to amplify a signal to any desired degree, the limit to the sensitivity of many modern receivers is not the degree of amplification but randomelectronic noise present in the circuit, which can drown out a weak radio signal.

Demodulation

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Main article:Demodulation
Symbol for a demodulator

After the radio signal is filtered and amplified, the receiver must extract the information-bearingmodulation signal from the modulated radio frequencycarrier wave. This is done by a circuit called ademodulator (detector). Each type of modulation requires a different type of demodulator

Many other types of modulation are also used for specialized purposes.

The modulation signal output by the demodulator is usually amplified to increase its strength, then the information is converted back to a human-usable form by some type oftransducer. Anaudio signal, representing sound, as in a broadcast radio, is converted tosound waves by anearphone orloudspeaker. Avideo signal, representing moving images, as in atelevision receiver, is converted to light by adisplay.Digital data, as in awireless modem, is applied as input to acomputer ormicroprocessor, which interacts with human users.

AM demodulation
Main article:Envelope detector
Envelope detector circuit
How an envelope detector works
The easiest type of demodulation to understand is AM demodulation, used inAM radios to recover theaudio modulation signal, which represents sound and is converted tosound waves by the radio'sspeaker. It is accomplished by a circuit called anenvelope detector(see circuit), consisting of adiode(D) with a bypasscapacitor(C) across its output.
See graphs. Theamplitude modulated radio signal from the tuned circuit is shown at(A). The rapid oscillations are theradio frequencycarrier wave. Theaudio signal (the sound) is contained in the slow variations (modulation) of theamplitude (size) of the waves. If it was applied directly to the speaker, this signal cannot be converted to sound, because the audio excursions are the same on both sides of the axis, averaging out to zero, which would result in no net motion of the speaker's diaphragm.(B) When this signal is applied as inputVI to the detector, the diode(D) conducts current in one direction but not in the opposite direction, thus allowing through pulses of current on only one side of the signal. In other words, itrectifies the AC current to a pulsing DC current. The resulting voltageVO applied to the loadRL no longer averages zero; its peak value is proportional to the audio signal.(C) The bypass capacitor(C) is charged up by the current pulses from the diode, and its voltage follows the peaks of the pulses, the envelope of the audio wave. It performs a smoothing (low pass filtering) function, removing the radio frequency carrier pulses, leaving the low frequency audio signal to pass through the loadRL. The audio signal is amplified and applied to earphones or a speaker.

Automatic gain control (AGC)

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Main article:Automatic gain control

Thesignal strength (amplitude) of the radio signal from a receiver's antenna varies drastically, by orders of magnitude, depending on how far away the radio transmitter is, how powerful it is, andpropagation conditions along the path of the radio waves.[3] The strength of the signal received from a given transmitter varies with time due to changing propagation conditions of the path through which the radio wave passes, such asmultipath interference; this is calledfading.[3][4] In an AM receiver, the amplitude of the audio signal from the detector, and the sound volume, is proportional to the amplitude of the radio signal, so fading causes variations in the volume. In addition as the receiver is tuned between strong and weak stations, the volume of the sound from the speaker would vary drastically. Without an automatic system to handle it, in an AM receiver, constant adjustment of the volume control would be required.

With other types of modulation like FM or FSK the amplitude of the modulation does not vary with the radio signal strength, but in all types the demodulator requires a certain range of signal amplitude to operate properly.[4][5] Insufficient signal amplitude will cause an increase of noise in the demodulator, while excessive signal amplitude will cause amplifier stages to overload (saturate), causing distortion (clipping) of the signal.

Therefore, almost all modern receivers include afeedbackcontrol system which monitors theaverage level of the radio signal at the detector, and adjusts thegain of the amplifiers to give the optimum signal level for demodulation.[4][5][3] This is calledautomatic gain control (AGC). AGC can be compared to thedark adaptation mechanism in thehuman eye; on entering a dark room the gain of the eye is increased by the iris opening.[3] In its simplest form, an AGC system consists of arectifier which converts the RF signal to a varying DC level, alowpass filter to smooth the variations and produce an average level.[5] This is applied as a control signal to an earlier amplifier stage, to control its gain. In a superheterodyne receiver, AGC is usually applied to theIF amplifier, and there may be a second AGC loop to control the gain of the RF amplifier to prevent it from overloading, too.

In certain receiver designs such as modern digital receivers, a related problem isDC offset of the signal. This is corrected by a similar feedback system.

Designs

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Main article:Radio receiver design

Tuned radio frequency (TRF) receiver

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Main article:Tuned radio frequency receiver
Block diagram of a tuned radio frequency receiver. To achieve enoughselectivity to reject stations on adjacent frequencies, multiple cascaded bandpass filter stages had to be used. The dotted line indicates that the bandpass filters must be tuned together.

In the simplest type of radio receiver, called atuned radio frequency (TRF) receiver, the three functions above are performed consecutively:[4] (1) the mix of radio signals from the antenna is filtered to extract the signal of the desired transmitter; (2) this oscillating voltage is sent through aradio frequency (RF)amplifier to increase its strength to a level sufficient to drive the demodulator; (3) the demodulator recovers themodulation signal (which in broadcast receivers is anaudio signal, a voltage oscillating at anaudio frequency rate representing the sound waves) from the modulated radiocarrier wave; (4) the modulation signal is amplified further in anaudio amplifier, then is applied to aloudspeaker orearphone to convert it to sound waves.

Although the TRF receiver is used in a few applications, it has practical disadvantages which make it inferior to the superheterodyne receiver below, which is used in most applications.[4] The drawbacks stem from the fact that in the TRF the filtering, amplification, and demodulation are done at the high frequency of the incoming radio signal. The bandwidth of a filter increases with its center frequency, so as the TRF receiver is tuned to different frequencies its bandwidth varies. Most important, the increasing congestion of theradio spectrum requires that radio channels be spaced very close together in frequency. It is extremely difficult to build filters operating at radio frequencies that have a narrow enough bandwidth to separate closely spaced radio stations. TRF receivers typically must have many cascaded tuning stages to achieve adequate selectivity. TheAdvantages section below describes how the superheterodyne receiver overcomes these problems.

The superheterodyne design

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Main article:Superheterodyne receiver
Block diagram of a superheterodyne receiver. The dotted line indicates that the RF filter and local oscillator must be tuned in tandem.

Thesuperheterodyne receiver, invented in 1918 byEdwin Armstrong[6] is the design used in almost all modern receivers[7][4][8][9] except a few specialized applications.

In the superheterodyne, the radio frequency signal from the antenna is shifted down to a lower "intermediate frequency" (IF), before it is processed.[10][11][12][13] The incoming radio frequency signal from the antenna is mixed with an unmodulated signal generated by alocal oscillator (LO) in the receiver. The mixing is done in a nonlinear circuit called the "mixer". The result at the output of the mixer is aheterodyne or beat frequency at the difference between these two frequencies. The process is similar to the way two musical notes at different frequencies played together produce abeat note. This lower frequency is called theintermediate frequency (IF). The IF signal also has themodulationsidebands that carry the information that was present in the original RF signal. The IF signal passes through filter and amplifier stages,[8] then isdemodulated in a detector, recovering the original modulation.

The receiver is easy to tune; to receive a different frequency it is only necessary to change the local oscillator frequency. The stages of the receiver after the mixer operates at the fixed intermediate frequency (IF) so the IF bandpass filter does not have to be adjusted to different frequencies. The fixed frequency allows modern receivers to use sophisticatedquartz crystal,ceramic resonator, orsurface acoustic wave (SAW) IF filters that have very highQ factors, to improve selectivity.

The RF filter on the front end of the receiver is needed to prevent interference from any radio signals at theimage frequency. Without an input filter the receiver can receive incoming RF signals at two different frequencies,.[14][9][13][15] The receiver can be designed to receive on either of these two frequencies; if the receiver is designed to receive on one, any other radio station or radio noise on the other frequency may pass through and interfere with the desired signal. A single tunable RF filter stage rejects the image frequency; since these are relatively far from the desired frequency, a simple filter provides adequate rejection. Rejection of interfering signals much closer in frequency to the desired signal is handled by the multiple sharply-tuned stages of the intermediate frequency amplifiers, which do not need to change their tuning.[9] This filter does not need great selectivity, but as the receiver is tuned to different frequencies it must "track" in tandem with the local oscillator. The RF filter also serves to limit the bandwidth applied to the RF amplifier, preventing it from being overloaded by strong out-of-band signals.

Block diagram of a dual-conversion superheterodyne receiver

To achieve both good image rejection and selectivity, many modern superhet receivers use two intermediate frequencies; this is called adual-conversion ordouble-conversion superheterodyne.[4] The incoming RF signal is first mixed with one local oscillator signal in the first mixer to convert it to a high IF frequency, to allow efficient filtering out of the image frequency, then this first IF is mixed with a second local oscillator signal in a second mixer to convert it to a low IF frequency for good bandpass filtering. Some receivers even usetriple-conversion.

At the cost of the extra stages, the superheterodyne receiver provides the advantage of greater selectivity than can be achieved with a TRF design. Where very high frequencies are in use, only the initial stage of the receiver needs to operate at the highest frequencies; the remaining stages can provide much of the receiver gain at lower frequencies which may be easier to manage. Tuning is simplified compared to a multi-stage TRF design, and only two stages need to track over the tuning range. The total amplification of the receiver is divided between three amplifiers at different frequencies; the RF, IF, and audio amplifier. This reduces problems with feedback andparasitic oscillations that are encountered in receivers where most of the amplifier stages operate at the same frequency, as in the TRF receiver.[10]

The most important advantage is that betterselectivity can be achieved by doing the filtering at the lower intermediate frequency.[4][8][10] One of the most important parameters of a receiver is itsbandwidth, the band of frequencies it accepts. In order to reject nearby interfering stations or noise, a narrow bandwidth is required. In all known filtering techniques, the bandwidth of the filter increases in proportion with the frequency, so by performing the filtering at the lowerfIF{\displaystyle f_{\text{IF}}}, rather than the frequency of the original radio signalfRF{\displaystyle f_{\text{RF}}}, a narrower bandwidth can be achieved. Modern FM and television broadcasting, cellphones and other communications services, with their narrow channel widths, would be impossible without the superheterodyne.[8]

History

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This section is an excerpt fromHistory of radio receivers.[edit]
Radio waves were first identified in German physicistHeinrich Hertz's 1887 series of experiments to prove James Clerk Maxwell'selectromagnetic theory. Hertz used spark-excited dipole antennas to generate the waves and micrometerspark gaps attached todipole andloop antennas to detect them.[16][17][18] These precursor radio receivers were primitive devices, more accurately described as radio wave "sensors" or "detectors", as they could only receive radio waves within about 100 feet of the transmitter, and were not used for communication but instead as laboratory instruments in scientific experiments and engineering demonstrations.

See also

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toradio receivers.

References

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  1. ^Radio-Electronics,Radio Receiver Technology
  2. ^Ganguly, Partha Kumar (2015).Principles of Electronics. PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd. pp. 286–289.ISBN 978-8120351240.
  3. ^abcdDrentea, Cornell (2010).Modern Communications Receiver Design and Technology. Artech House. pp. 325–330.ISBN 978-1596933101.
  4. ^abcdefghRudersdorfer, Ralf (2013).Radio Receiver Technology: Principles, Architectures and Applications. John Wiley and Sons.ISBN 978-1118647844. Chapter 1
  5. ^abcHagen, Jon B. (1996).Radio-Frequency Electronics: Circuits and Applications. Cambridge Univ. Press. p. 60.ISBN 978-0521553568.
  6. ^Armstrong, Edwin H. (February 1921)."A new system of radio frequency amplification".Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers.9 (1):3–11. RetrievedDecember 23, 2015.
  7. ^Lee, Thomas H. (2004)The Design of CMOS Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits, 2nd Ed., p. 14-15
  8. ^abcdDixon, Robert (1998).Radio Receiver Design. CRC Press. pp. 57–61.ISBN 978-0824701611.
  9. ^abcWilliams, Lyle Russell (2006)The New Radio Receiver Building Handbook, p. 28-30
  10. ^abcArmy Technical Manual TM 11-665: C-W and A-M Radio Transmitters and Receivers, 1952, p. 195-197
  11. ^McNicol, Donald (1946)Radio's Conquest of Space, p. 272-278
  12. ^Terman, Frederick E. (1943)Radio Engineers' Handbook, p. 636-638
  13. ^abCarr, Joseph J. (2001).The Technician's Radio Receiver Handbook: Wireless and Telecommunication Technology. Newnes. pp. 8–11.ISBN 978-0750673198.
  14. ^Rembovsky, Anatoly; Ashikhmin, Alexander; Kozmin, Vladimir; et al. (2009).Radio Monitoring: Problems, Methods and Equipment. Springer Science and Business Media. p. 26.ISBN 978-0387981000.
  15. ^Terman, Frederick E. (1943)Radio Engineers' Handbook, p. 645
  16. ^Lee, Thomas H. (2004).The Design of CMOS Radio-Frequency Integrated Circuits, 2nd Ed. UK: Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–8.ISBN 978-0521835398.
  17. ^Appleyard, Rollo (October 1927)."Pioneers of Electrical Communication part 5 - Heinrich Rudolph Hertz"(PDF).Electrical Communication.6 (2): 67. RetrievedDecember 19, 2015.
  18. ^Phillips, Vivian J. (1980).Early Radio Wave Detectors. London: Inst. of Electrical Engineers. pp. 4–12.ISBN 978-0906048245.

Further reading

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toRadio receivers.
  • Communications Receivers, Third Edition, Ulrich L. Rohde, Jerry Whitaker, McGraw Hill, New York, 2001,ISBN 0-07-136121-9
  • Buga, N.; Falko A.; Chistyakov N.I. (1990). Chistyakov N.I. (ed.).Radio Receiver Theory. Translated from the Russian by Boris V. Kuznetsov.Moscow:Mir Publishers.ISBN 978-5-03-001321-3First published in Russian as «Радиоприёмные устройства»{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
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