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Radio -
Radio is the wireless transmission of signals, by modulation
of electromagnetic waves with frequencies below those of visible
light.
Electromagnetic radiation travels by means of
oscillating electromagnetic fields that pass through the
air and the vacuum of space. It does not require a
medium of transport. Information is carried by
systematically changing (modulating) some property of
the radiated waves, such as their amplitude or their
frequency. When radio waves pass an electrical
conductor, the oscillating fields induce an alternating
current in the conductor. This can be detected and
transformed into sound or other signals that carry
information.
The word 'radio' is used to describe this phenomenon,
and radio transmissions are classed as radio frequency
emissions. Please feel free to send your feedback to us
at elnino at dxinginfo.com
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Telegraph - Wireless - radio telegraphy - radio
Originally, radio or radioteleography was called 'wireless
telegraphy', which was shortened to 'wireless'. The prefix
radio- in the sense of wireless transmission was first recorded
in the word radioconductor, coined by the French physicist
Edouard Branly in 1897 and based on the verb to radiate (in
Latin "radius" means "spoke of a wheel, beam of light, ray").
'Radio' as a noun is said to have been coined by advertising
expert Waldo Warren (White 1944). The word appears in a 1907
article by Lee de Forest, was adopted by the United States Navy
in 1912 and became common by the time of the first commercial
broadcasts in the United States in the 1920s. (The noun
'broadcasting' itself came from an agricultural term, meaning
'scattering seeds'.) The American term was then adopted by other
languages in Europe and Asia, although British Commonwealth
countries retained the term 'wireless' until the mid-20th
century. In Japanese, the term 'wireless' is the basis for the
term 'radio wave' although the term for the device that listens
to radio waves is literally 'device for receiving sounds'.
In recent years the term 'wireless' has gained
renewed popularity through the rapid growth of short
range networking, e.g., WLAN ('Wireless Local Area
Network'), WiFi and Bluetooth as well as mobile
telephony, e.g., GSM and UMTS. Today, the term 'radio'
often refers to the actual transceiver device or chip,
whereas 'wireless' refers to the system and/or method
used for radio communication. Hence one talks about
radio transceivers and Radio Frequency Identification
(RFID), but about wireless devices and wireless sensor
networks.
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Invention of Radio
Long Controversy
Although radio invention was long attributed to Guglielmo
Marconi, today we also recognize that Serbian-American genius
Nikola Tesla as a inventor of the radio. However, the identity
of the original inventor of radio, at the time called wireless
telegraphy, is contentious. Development from a laboratory
demonstration to commercial utility spanned several decades and
required the efforts of many practitioners. The controversy over
who invented the radio, with the benefit of hindsight can be
found here
»
Read More
History
History of Modern Radio, Radio
Communication and Radio Receiver
In 1893, in St. Louis, Missouri, Tesla made devices for his
experiments with electricity. Addressing the Franklin Institute
in Philadelphia and the National Electric Light Association, he
described and demonstrated in detail the principles of his
wireless work. The descriptions contained all the elements that
were later incorporated into radio systems before the
development of the vacuum tube. He initially experimented with
magnetic receivers, unlike the coherers (detecting devices
consisting of tubes filled with iron filings which had been
invented by Temistocle Calzecchi-Onesti at Fermo in Italy in
1884) used by Guglielmo Marconi and other early experimenters.
In 1894 Alexander Stepanovich Popov built his first radio
receiver, which contained a coherer. Further refined as a
lightning detector, it was presented to the Russian Physical and
Chemical Society on May 7, 1895.
»
Read More
Uses of radio
Maritime, telegraph to AM, FM
Early uses were maritime, for sending telegraphic messages
using Morse code between ships and land. The earliest users
included the Japanese Navy scouting the Russian fleet during the
Battle of Tsushima in 1905. One of the most memorable uses of
marine telegraphy was during the sinking of the RMS Titanic in
1912, including communications between operators on the sinking
ship and nearby vessels, and communications to shore stations
listing the survivors
Uses of radio
Maritime, telegraph to AM, FM
Early uses were maritime, for sending telegraphic messages
using Morse code between ships and land. The earliest users
included the Japanese Navy scouting the Russian fleet during the
Battle of Tsushima in 1905. One of the most memorable uses of
marine telegraphy was during the sinking of the RMS Titanic in
1912, including communications between operators on the sinking
ship and nearby vessels, and communications to shore stations
listing the survivors
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Radio waves are a form of electromagnetic radiation, created
whenever a charged object (in normal radio transmission, an
electron) accelerates with a frequency that lies in the radio
frequency (RF) portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. In radio,
this acceleration is caused by an alternating current in an antenna.
Radio frequencies occupy the range from a few tens of hertz to three
hundred gigahertz, although commercially important uses of radio use
only a small part of this spectrum.
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Radio spectrum |
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ELF |
SLF |
ULF |
VLF |
LF |
MF |
HF |
VHF |
UHF |
SHF |
EHF |
| 3 Hz |
30 Hz |
300 Hz |
3 kHz |
30 kHz |
300 kHz |
3 MHz |
30 MHz |
300 MHz |
3 GHz |
30 GHz |
| 30 Hz |
300 Hz |
3 kHz |
30 kHz |
300 kHz |
3 MHz |
30 MHz |
300 MHz |
3 GHz |
30 GHz |
300 GHz |
Other types of electromagnetic radiation, with
frequencies above the RF range, are microwave,
infrared, visible light, ultraviolet, X-rays and
gamma rays. Since the energy of an individual photon
of radio frequency is too low to remove an electron
from an atom, radio waves are classified as
non-ionizing radiation.
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Radio - DX @ DXing Info - DXinginfo.Com |


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