Presented By: Priyanka Shori Shyamli Mishra
Presented By: Priyanka Shori Shyamli Mishra
Reception
Demodulation Amplification
Transmission
Methodology of Radio
Carrier Wave
Microphone Modulating signal
Phase 1
: Baseband Or the
Phase 2
: After carrier
Microphone
Microphone is a device which converts acoustical energy into electrical energy. In the professional broadcasting field microphones have primarily to be capable of giving the highest fidelity of reproduction over audio bandwidth. The first type of studio microphone is the condenser microphone. The second type of studio microphone is dynamic microphone. The third major type of studio microphone is the ribbon microphone.
Classification of microphone
Pressure Operated Type: In such microphones only one side of the diaphragm is exposed to the sound wave. The output voltage is proportional to the sound pressure on the exposed face of the diaphragm with respect to the constant pressure on the other face. Moving coil, carbon, crystal and condenser microphones are mostly of this type. In their basic forms, the pressure operated microphones are Omni-directional. Velocity or Pressure Gradient Type: In these microphones both sides of the diaphragm are exposed to the sound wave. Thus the output voltage is proportional to the instantaneous difference in pressure on the two sides of the diaphragm.
Design of Microphone
Microphones can be designed either to respond equally to sounds from an angle or to discriminate those arriving from specific directions. Microphones which respond equally at all angles are called Omni-directional. The microphones which pick up equally from front and rear and have very little pick up equally from sides are called Bi-directional and have a polar diagram as figure of eight. The microphones which pick up maximum from the front with slight reduction in the sides and very less pick up from the rear are called C ardioids (means heart shape).
Condenser Microphone .
This is the simplest type of all studio microphones. They work by converting signals caused by acoustic energy to electrical energy resulting in a stronger signal. Condenser microphones use energy from the studios mixing station or from a battery supply to operate.
Dynamic Microphone
These are the kind of microphones that generate signals by a conductor which is in magnetic field being in motion. The majority of microphones that fall under the dynamic microphone category have a light, very thin diaphragm that gets in motion responding to the pressure of the sound it is exposed to. The motion creates voice coils which are suspended to magnetic fields, making the fields to move which in turn creates electric currents in small quantities. Majority of dynamic studio microphone can operate without external power supply.In many occasions dynamic microphones are used in studios to record drums, electric guitars and the like.
Frequency Response
. Frequency response of a microphone depends on: Direction of arrival of sound, and Distance between the source and the microphone Directivity
Termination Impedance The microphone must have proper impedance and a balanced or unbalanced output suited to the pre-amplifier. In the broadcast chain the microphone lines cover long distances, therefore, the impedance is chosen in the range of 50 ohms to 60 ohms at the microphone terminals Sensitivity: The ability to pick up weak sound and to deliver more electrical signal determines the sensitivity. It is measured in dBs below 1 volt as the electrical output from a microphone when a standard sound pressure of one microbar i.e. 1 dyne per sqr. cm. is applied at the diaphragm of the microphone
Placement of Microphone
Placement of microphone has important bearing on the quality of its output. A few general guidelines given in the following paragraphs should help in improvement of programme production. Microphones should be placed with its 0o axis facing the source of sound to avoid off axis coloration. Phasing of Microphone: Whenever two or more microphones are used with their outputs mixed together, it should be ensured that their outputs are in phase. Working Distance: Whenever a directional microphone is kept fairly close to the source of sound low frequencies in the output of the microphone may get disproportionately boosted thereby giving rise to boom sound. This effect known as proximity effect. This effect should be normally avoided by placing the microphones fairly away (30-45 cm) from the source of sound.
Erasing process
Method for this is to feed the erase head with a high amplitude signal of about 100 kHz and the tape passes over this erase head before it passes on to the record head. In this arrangement every part of the tape passes the erase head gap (about 15 mil) and is subjected to about 200 cycles of alternating magnetic field, starting from low value at the start of the gap, increasing to saturation value in the middle of the gap and again steadily dropping to low value of the field, as the tape leaves the gap. These repeated magnetizing cum demagnetizing cycles erase the signal completely and leave the tape in completely demagnetized form similar to a virgin tape without a magnetic history.
Electronic System
The Recording Chain: A correct amount of HF boost is provided to pre compensate for the HF record process losses as described earlier. It converts constant voltage input into constant current output. This is required because the record head is a current operated device and the magnetic flux is proportional to the current flowing in the record head coil. The Playback Chain: The output of the PB head is rather low and rising with frequency. Great care is taken in electrically and magnetically shielding the P.B. Head to avoid hum pick up.
Recording loss
With a constant current to the recording head at various frequencies, the flux recorded on the tape will be less for higher frequencies. The most important ones are: Head losses, due to hysteresis and eddy current being more at higher frequency. Self demagnetization losses also are higher at higher frequencies as the recorded wave length and the associated half wave bar magnets become smaller and smaller in length and are closely packed and try to get demagnetized by mutually canceling effect of the bar magnets. High frequency flux is not able to penetrate the full depth of the magnetic coating on the tape. Only the layer near the surface effectively contributes towards recorded flux. This also causes loss of recorded flux as the signal frequency increases
Parabolic Dish Antenna : Circular polarization of INSAT broadcast is used as it does not require any adjustment of feed or polarization matching. Low Noise Amplifier (LNA) : It contains two LNA PCBs to have 100% redundancy. Front end converter :It has also got two chains for redundancy. Any one chain can be selected by RF switch provided at its input
Passive transmitting unit: The passive translator splits the combined nominal IF of 70 MHz into 52 MHz and 92 MHz components
Active frequency translator: The function of FTA is to boost the RN carriers and translate them all to 52 MHz band.
The 52 MHz band signals coming from FTP are amplified in IF amplifier having a gain of 50 dB. Then the output is divided into three outputs using power divider. The 92 MHz band signals coming from FTP are also amplified in 50 dB. IF amplifier then converted into 52 MHz band after beating with 40 MHz oscillator. The output of mixer is passed through a band pass filter and then amplified and further divided into three outputs.
Synthesizer unit
This unit consists of six modules of synthesized frequency translator. Each module takes the 52 MHz IF. Synthesizer is used as a variable local oscillator. It consists of a VCO and a PLL. In PLL synthesizer a reference signal is generated using a crystal of 2.048 MHz
Demodulator unit
The demodulator has a band pass filter in the first stage and is tuned to 5.5 MHz. After BPF the sub carrier is amplified and then demodulated in a phase locked loop frequency demodulator circuit. The audio signal retrieved after the PLL demodulator are amplified in operational amplifier which incorporates de-emphasis circuit. This is followed by a expander. The expansion is done by an IC. The audio is amplified and filtered. The unbalance to balance is done by a repeat coil. The output is balanced 600 ohms and is providing +9 dBm.
FM Transmitter
AM broadcast bands gives shrinkage in the night-time service area due to fading, interference, etc. FM broadcasting offers several advantages over AM such as uniform day and night coverage, good quality listening and suppression of noise, interference, etc. All India Radio has gone in for FM broadcasting using modern FM transmitters incorporating state-of-art technology.
Working Of an FM Transmitter
L R
Stereo coder
antenna
Phase detector
A tower of good height is required for mounting the FM antenna since the coverage of the transmitter is proportional to the height of the tower. For a 100 m height, the coverage is about 60 km. Wherever new towers were to be provided, generally they are of 100 m height since beyond this height; there is steep rise in their prices because of excessive wind load on the top of the tower. The main requirements of the antenna to be used for FM transmitters are : Wide-band usage from 88 to 108 MHz range. Omni-directional horizontal pattern of field strength. Circular polarization for better reception. High gain for both vertical and horizontal signals. Two degrees beam tilt below horizontal Sturdy design for maintenance-free service.
The distance of the feeding strip is 240 mm from edge and this should not be disturbed. All the six dipoles are mounted on a 100 mm dia Pole. This pole is supported by the main tower. The antenna is fed through a power divider which divides total power into 6 outlets for feeding the 6 dipoles. The power divider is mounted on a different face of the tower. The main feeder cables, power divider branch feeder cables, and dipoles are of hollow construction to enable pressurization of the system. The antenna can handle two channels with diplexing. Suitable terminations are supplied for terminating the output of power divider in case of failure of any dipole.
Feeder cable
It is for connecting the output power of the transmitter to the dipoles through the power divider. Enough safety margins have been provided in the power handling capacity, no standby cable has been provided. This cable can be used later for two transmitters by diplexing. The cable and the antenna system should be fed with dry air by means of a dehydrator provided with the transmitter.
Our tuner uses a coil of wire (called an inductor) and a capacitor. The combination of inductor and capacitor makes something called a resonator-- it is a circuit that throws away all the unwanted signals, and keeps only the one that we want. The resonator resonates at a particular frequency that is determined by the size of the inductor and capacitor. The charge sloshes back and forth in the tank circuit at a certain frequency and the station being tuned in to must be very near that frequency In my radios, I will use a capacitor that has a fixed size, and i will tune the radio to different stations by changing the size (the "inductance") of the inductor.
coil aerial
pivot
Demodulation phase1
. The detector is something called a germanium diode. The
germanium diode lets electricity flow in one direction but not in the opposite direction. The germanium diode looks like a little glass cylinder with metal wires coming out each end. It is recovery of baseband signal that can be done by coherent detection or synchronous detection i.e. by producing the same carrier signal at receiving end with same generating or centered frequency and phase angle to avoid any discrepancy
diode (MK484)
Amplification part
The signals that we pick up with the antenna and tuner are very small -- maybe only a few thousandths of a volt. (A regular flashlight battery is 1 volts). So, the amplifier makes the signal bigger. In our radios, we will two little things called integrated circuits, or chips, to make the signal bigger. There are a lot of different kids of integrated circuits. The kind that we will use are called op-amps, or operational amplifiers. Each op-amp looks like little spiders with 8 legs! We will use 2 of them in each radio. It simply produces a more powerful version of the audio signal.
Advantage OF FM over AM
AM is much looser than the FM signal meaning that less data can be sent at one time as it isnt compressed. All the transmitted power in FM is useful whereas in AM most of it is in the carrier which contains no useful information. Better Noise Performance Less adjacent- channel interference FM broadcasts operate in the VHF and UHF ranges in which there happens to be less noise than in the MF and HF ranges occupied by AM bands.
Thank you