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Continuous wave - Radio

Continuous wave - Radio: Encyclopedia II - Continuous wave - Radio

Very early radio transmitters used a spark gap to produce radio-frequency oscillations in the transmitting antenna; these signals had a characteristic rapidly damped amplitude during each pulse of radiated energy. When alternators and later electronic oscillators became available, the signal strength remained constant during each code element, leading to the description of this technique as "continuous" waves. An unmodulated carrier has no bandwidth and conveys no information; the act of keying the carrier on and off produces a finite ...

See also:

Continuous wave, Continuous wave - Radio, Continuous wave - Key clicks, Continuous wave - Laser physics

Continuous wave, Continuous wave - Key clicks, Continuous wave - Laser physics, Continuous wave - Radio, On-off keying, Amplitude modulation, Types of radio emissions

Continuous wave: Encyclopedia II - Continuous wave - Radio



Continuous wave - Radio

Very early radio transmitters used a spark gap to produce radio-frequency oscillations in the transmitting antenna; these signals had a characteristic rapidly damped amplitude during each pulse of radiated energy. When alternators and later electronic oscillators became available, the signal strength remained constant during each code element, leading to the description of this technique as "continuous" waves.

An unmodulated carrier has no bandwidth and conveys no information; the act of keying the carrier on and off produces a finite bandwidth relating to the transmission rate. Strictly speaking, a keyed carrier may be referred to as "ICW" for "Interrupted continuous wave" but the necessity of keying is usually understood.

While early radio transmission and reception were incapable of handling the complexity of actual audio and therefore and CW was the only form of communication available, it still remained a viable form of radio communication for many years after voice transmission was perfected, because of the low bandwidth of the signal which allows CW to cut through bad atmospheric conditions where AM and voice modulations would get lost. A simple half watt CW transmitter could transmit thousands of miles at night because of this bandwidth.

Continuous-wave radio was called radiotelegraphy because like the telegraph, it worked by means of a simple switch to transmit Morse code. However, instead of controlling the electricity in a cross-country wire, the switch controlled the power sent to a radio transmitter. This mode is still in common use by amateur radio operators due to its simplicity and reliability CW is the basis of the continuous-wave radar system, where a continuous wave is transmitted by one aerial while a second aerial receives the reflected radio energy.

In amateur radio parlance, the terms "CW" and "Morse code" are often used interchangeably, despite the distinctions between the two (Morse code may be sent using sound and light, for example).

Continuous wave - Key clicks

In morse (on off carrier keying) if the carrier wave is turned on or off rapidly the bandwidth will be very large, if the carrier turns on and off more slowly the bandwidth will be smaller. The problem of excessive bandwidth used by a morse transmitter which turns on/off too sharply is known as key clicks. If a perfectly made morse (CW) transmitter's output is feed into a series of cascaded class C stages then the output will be likely to suffer from key clicks because the power output of a class C stage increases greatly when the input power is increased slightly.




Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Radio", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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