answ2. An RF transmitter generates radio frequency waves in its circuits, and to this 'carrier signal', it adds the information part by modulating the carrier signal. This composite signal (carrier plus information) is then fed to an antenna (aerial).
The aerial induces a corresponding signal into the atmosphere, by altering the Electric and Magnetic fields at (obviously) the same frequency.
The impedance of 'free space' is few tens of Ohms to a few hundreds of Ohms.
[Impedance may be considered analogous to resistance, but with reactive properties as well.]
The power emitted by the transmitter can vary from a megawatt or so (for VLF signals) to a few watts for handheld devices.
An Rf receiver receives the signal from the atmosphere, from its own aerial.
The receiver aerial is often quite simple, and the signal level is typically of a few microvolts.
This it tunes in (gets rid of unwanted signals and amplifies only the wanted ones).
The receiver circuits then strip the information part of the signal from the carrier part, and amplify this to a useful level for audio or video.
The actual signal into the loudspeaker will be a few tens of volts. In spite of the inefficiency of loudspeakers, (often only a few %) the signal eventually appears at a level that may be heard. A background radio will be a few milliwatts of power.
Even a very loud sound is only a few watts of radiated (sound) energy!!
RF = Radio Frequency
Because RF does not require line-of-sight.
Yes, but it will be less efficient than one designed for FM.
To isolate the bias circuitry of the transistor from the feedback network with RF currents.
It's power that is loss during the tuning of the RF network. Ideally the reflective power is tuned to zero before striking the plasma to maximize the efficiency of the RF generator.
RF = Radio Frequency
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Yes, a modulator is required if you use a RF cable to connect it to the TV.
RF convertor. Radio shack.
An RF cable is an electrical connector designed to work at radio frequencies in the multi-megahertz range. Breakdown is a function of maximum voltage. Maximum capabilities is dependent on frequency since the typical value of VSWR is proportional to the increase in frequency.
I think you mean a (TV antenna amplifier) RF amplifier used with coax cable. The answer is YES it will work with DTV.
An RF (Radio Frequency) input is the technical term for a coaxial/antenna input on the back of a television. This input is often referred to as simply 'cable' or 'cable vision'.
No - the RF Out socket just relays the signal from the antenna (aerial) that is being shown on the TV to another device, such as a video recorder (VCR) or another TV set.
RF Modulator - Convert video and stereo audio from an A/V component into a coaxial cable output Try radioshack.com
An RF bypass is a small box fitted to the back on a cable decoder box. It's function is to 'strip off' the Analogue TV channels from the cable feed & provide them to your TV as with a normal airial. It is only available in cable areas that still broadcast analogue programme's & not every cable decoder will be fitted to them. (ex cable engineer)
RG-59 is RF cable, it is 75 ohms and it will carry video too.
Coaxial cable is the best/lowest cost way to move a RF signal from point A to point B.