Amplitude modulation; a method of broadcasting in which the desired audio or video signal modulates the amplitude of a 'carrier' signal Analog Information that is reproduced using a continuously varying electronic signal
Amplitude Modulation, as employed in AM radio broadcast This modulation varies a carrier signal's amplitude or magnitude to encode it with the desired broadcast signal The encoded signal is then broadcast at the station's designated carrier frequency A radio receiver detecting that signal demodulates it or separates the desired modulation component from the carrier
amplitude modulation A modulation technique by which information is conveyed through the amplitude of the carrier signal Compare with FM and PAM See also modulation
Amplitude Modulation AM is the standard broadcast transmission system used by the majority of licensed radio stations The term is commonly used to differentiate between AM and FM radio
Amplitude modulation A method of operation for transmitting signals by radio waves, used in medium wave broadcasting
Short for Amplitude Modulation, an AM radio in R/C is considered a "budget" radio, what most newcomers to R/C will start out with Most hobbyists will be fine with an AM radio, but some racers can benefit from FM or PCM radios An AM radio will have more glitching than these other, more expensive, radios
a radioactive transuranic metallic element; discovered by bombarding uranium with helium atoms
Stands for 'Amplitude Modulation'   It is a radio broadcasting system in which the amplitude of the radio wave is modulated to produce the broadcast   It is generally mono (as opposed to FM's stereo), and consequently is used mainly by 'talk radio' formats   AM radio signals travel further than FM, and consequently, can be broadcast over greater distances with less power