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AM broadcasting
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====Vacuum tube transmitters==== Advances in [[vacuum tube]] technology (called "valves" in British usage), especially after around 1915, revolutionized radio technology. Vacuum tube devices could be used to amplify electrical currents, which overcame the overheating issues of needing to insert microphones directly in the transmission antenna circuit. Vacuum tube transmitters also provided high-quality AM signals, and could operate on higher transmitting frequencies than alternator and arc transmitters.<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/electricalexperi07gern#page/1000/mode/1up "The Versatile Audion"] by H. Winfield Secor, ''Electrical Experimenter'', February 1920, pages 1000β1001, 1080-1083.</ref> Non-governmental radio transmissions were prohibited in many countries during World War I, but AM radiotelephony technology advanced greatly due to wartime research, and after the war the availability of tubes sparked a great increase in the number of amateur radio stations experimenting with AM transmission of news or music. Vacuum tubes remained the central technology of radio for 40 years, until [[transistor]]s began to dominate in the late 1950s, and are still used in the highest power broadcast transmitters.
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