No. The carrier "carries" the modulation. The modulation is the intelligence.
Modulating Valve ???? If you can tell me what system this valve would be in I can tell you the correct name for it and its location. example IPR valve in the high pressure oil system.
In Amplitude Modulation (AM), specifically in the case of Double Sideband Suppressed Carrier (DSB-SC) or Full Carrier (DSB-FC) AM, the required bandwidth is twice the bandwidth of the modulating signal. If the modulating signal has a bandwidth of B Hz, the bandwidth required for AM would be 2B Hz. This is because both the upper and lower sidebands of the carrier wave are utilized in the modulation process, each consuming bandwidth equivalent to the original signal.
The way you would modulate from D major to Bb major would be passing through a D minor chord then modulating to G minor to get to Bb major.
Definition: In FM technique, the frequency of the carrier signal changes according to the instantaneous amplitude of the modulating signal. Hence, the frequency of the modulating signal is of irrelevance here and the devition from "fc" will be dependent on the amplitude of the same. considering 2GHz and 4GHz to be digital signal the ratio would be 1:1.
Check the modulating valve - maybe sucking oil through the vacuum system and burning it as fuel.
To be referred to as being ambiguous one would be referred to as "a legend in their own mind"
Both would be referred to as Celtic cultures, and very occasionally Gaelic cultures.
It would be referred to as a stream.
A USB broadband modem can be used for quite a number of various purposes. Its primary purpose and most common use is modulating an analog carrier signal to encode digital information.
If she has never been bred before, then she would be referred to as a maiden mare. If she has been bred before, but is not currently pregnant or raising a foal, she would be referred to as an empty mare or a dry mare. Otherwise, she is still normally referred to as a mare.
One answer would be Hemophelia.
That would be the clarinet.