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Demodulation
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== History == Demodulation was first used in [[radio receivers]]. In the [[wireless telegraphy]] radio systems used during the first 3 decades of radio (1884β1914) the transmitter did not communicate audio (sound) but transmitted information in the form of pulses of radio waves that represented text messages in [[Morse code]].{{Citation needed|date=March 2023}} Therefore, the receiver merely had to detect the presence or absence of the radio signal, and produce a click sound. The device that did this was called a [[detector (radio)|detector]]. The first detectors were [[coherer]]s, simple devices that acted as a switch. The term ''detector'' stuck, was used for other types of demodulators and continues to be used to the present day for a demodulator in a radio receiver. The first type of [[modulation]] used to transmit sound over radio waves was [[amplitude modulation]] (AM), invented by [[Reginald Fessenden]] around 1900. An AM radio signal can be demodulated by [[rectifying]] it to remove one side of the carrier, and then filtering to remove the radio-frequency component, leaving only the modulating audio component. This is equivalent to peak detection with a suitably long time constant. The [[amplitude]] of the recovered audio frequency varies with the modulating audio signal, so it can drive an earphone or an audio amplifier. Fessendon invented the first AM demodulator in 1904 called the [[electrolytic detector]], consisting of a short needle dipping into a cup of dilute acid. The same year [[John Ambrose Fleming]] invented the [[Fleming valve]] or [[thermionic diode]] which could also rectify an AM signal.
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