Subcarrier



         


A subcarrier is separate analog or digital signal carried on a main radio transmission, which carries extra information such as voice or data. More technically, an already-modulated signal, which is then modulated into another signal of higher frequency and bandwidth. This is a method of multiplexing.

Stereo is a subcarrier of an FM radio station, which takes the left channel and "subtracts" the right channel from it -- essentially by hooking up the right-channel wires backward and then joining left and right. The result is modulated with AM onto a 38kHz radio frequency, which is joined with the mono left+right audio (which ranges 50Hz~15kHz). A 19kHz pilot "tone" is also added to trigger radios to decode the stereo subcarrier, and voilá, you have FM stereo, fully compatible with mono. Once the receiver has the L+R and L-R signals demodulated, it adds the two ( L+R + L-R = 2L ) to get the left channel and subtracts ( L+R - L-R = 2R) to get the right.

Likewise, TV signals are transmitted with the black and white luminance part as the main signal, and the color chrominance as the subcarriers. A black and white TV simply ignores the extra information, as it has no decoder for it. Subcarriers on the video can also carry three audio channels, including one for stereo (same left-minus-right method as for FM), another for second audio programs (such as descriptive video service for the vision-impaired, and bilingual programs), and yet a third hidden one for the studio to communicate with reporters or technicians in the field (or for a technician at a remote transmitter site to talk back to the studio), or any other use a TV station might see fit.

Other uses:


Note that higher frequencies drop off much more rapidly, which explains why FM stereo gets noisy at a distance, while switching to mono is still perfectly clear and easy to listen to.





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