EXPLAIN LIKE I’M MODERATELY INTELLIGENT: - You tune FM radio to a dead channel, it’s loud static. - You turn FM radio to an active channel playing silence, it’s quiet. Is this ONLY because of automatic gain control, or is there a more complicated reason?
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So silence is a non-rotating vector with some magnitude; that keeps the angle constant. No signal is just nothing, zero, and then the angle is meaningless (in practice, just dominated by noise). Effectively FM has its own "gain control" of sorts built right into the modulation.
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Yep, this is why you will very rarely hear two stations on one frequency; the stronger one wins and the weaker one effectively goes away.
End of conversation
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