John Hutchison & Ronnie Milione
The Philadelphia Experiment Recreated!
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The Appearance of the Image-FrequencyHeterodyning is the combining of the incoming signal with the local oscillator signal. When heterodyning the incoming signal and the local oscillator signal in the mixer stage, four frequencies are produced. They are the two basic input frequencies and the sum and the difference of those two frequencies. It is possible for superheterodyne receivers to receive two different stations at the same point of the dial therefore.
The result is a second reception frequency as a „mirror image” around the intermediate frequency. Assuming an intermediate frequency of 60 MHz, the local oscillator will track at a frequency of 60 MHz higher than the incoming signal. For example, suppose the receiver is tuned to pick up a signal on a frequency of 1030 MHz. The local oscillator will be operating at a frequency of 1090 MHz. The received and local oscillator signals are mixed, or heterodyned, in the converter stage and one of the frequencies resulting from this mixing action is the difference between the two signals, or 60 MHz, the IF frequency. This IF frequency is then amplified in the IF stages and sent on to the detector and audio stages. Any signal at a frequency of
60 MHz that appears on the plate of the converter circuit will
be accepted by the IF amplifier and passed on. So on a receiver
with no RF amplifier, the input to the converter is rather
broadly tuned and some signals other than the desired signal
will get through to the input jack of the converter stage.
Normally these other signals will mix with the local oscillator
signal and produce frequencies that are outside the bandpass of
the 60 MHz IF amplifier and will be rejected. However, if there
is a station operating on a frequency of 1150 MHz, and this
signal passes through the rather broad tuned input circuit and
appears on the input jack of the converter stage, it too will
mix with the local oscillator and produce a frequency of 60 MHz
Calculation of the Image-Frequencyat the example of the FM radio
frequencies (87,5 - 108 MHz): If an oscillator frequency is assumed above the reception frequency, then intermediate frequencies have to be expected from two reception frequencies at the exit of the mixer stage.
If I want to receive the highest
frequency, then the image frequency must be below the receiving
frequency more than the bandwidth (and reversed). Well, if i
want to receive a frequency of 108 MHz, then a strange
transmitter may send at approximately 87 MHz without to
disturbe.
I can convict both relations in
one equation now: By a fluke: All the radio sets for this FM-waveband work on the intermediate frequency of 10,7 MHz!
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