|
Presenting the Geekcorps's transmitter
Posted by
Tihissemahoui Serge Patrick
on
May 19, 2009 at
05:04:49
Radio transmitters for communities Our technical team leads by Ali Touré is working on a new model of radio transmitters. This is an amelioration of the first version used in northern Mali. The first prototype of the new version is already made and tested with success. We hope to use that new version with an LCD screen for the new radio stations in northern Mali.
The first thing a transmitter needs is a carrier signal. this is the radio frequency it will transmit at. (Radio frequency, or RF, is an electrical variation in the thousands, millions, or even billions of times per second) The next thing it needs is intelligence. (something we're actually trying to transmit, such as music or a voice) This is modulated onto the carrier frequency in one of two ways. Frequency Modulation (FM) is where the intelligence varies the frequency of the carrier signal. And Amplitude Modulation, (AM) where the transmitted strength is varied instead. After these two signals are provided, a transmitter just has to amplify them. The exact amount varies, from a few watts for a cell phone, to millions of watts for high powered RADARs. The methods of amplifying usually include either transistors, (simple electronic components that increase power by acting like a gate on a larger power source), or Vacuum tubes (think "really fancy light bulbs") that accomplish the same thing as a transistor. Geekcorps's transmitter |
Highlights
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||