An amplified signal is just a signal with added sound, if you compare it to an analogue CD, as it is copied, more and more unwanted sound is added (interference). So if you use that comparison when talking about radio amplification, more and more sound is added from interfering frequencies & sound, this gradually weakens the signal, so the end result will be a poorer signal that is harder to read (Worse than the original signal, and possibly muffled).
E.Akbay
The component that gets amplified will depend on the type of amplifier we are using. In general the voltage component of the signal gets amplified.
The Amplified Bible is a Bible with additional text that helps to explain more complicated passages. One can purchase an Amplified Bible at a local Christian bookstore, or online at Amazon, AllBibles, or Barnes and Noble.
Well, yes they do. Any amplification adds noise to the signal. Some of this can be removed but the effects are cumulative. Imagine making a copy of a piece of music by an analog technique. Then making a copy from that copy, etc. You get more and more noise added to the system, even when the amplification is one. In digital systems, the music (or whatever) is made of bits that are either there or not. Cleaning up the bits is very easy. Perfect copies are typical.
THE SUN!!!
OEM=Original Equipment Manufacturer
It depends on what and where the original and reflected figures are.
The WASJIG original puzzles can be solved simply by guessing what the people might see.
Yes a destroyed original may be used in a court of law if there is a copy. Just put in a request for a new original and explain what happened to the original.
it depends
no,as its composition changes and it can not be brought to its original state
because it is
disadvantages of histogram compared to barchart