Group: sci.physics.electromag
From: "Mas Plak"
Date: Saturday, October 06, 2007 10:40 PM
Subject: Re: Receiving 2 GHz AM signals in space. What do they sound like?


"Green Xenon [Radium]" wrote in message
news:47072242$0$15384$4c368faf@ ...
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>
> Hi:
>
> Let's say I am in a space station which has a 2 GHz DX AM analog
> receiver that receives the magnetic fields [while ignoring the electric
> fields]

WRONG. it is therefore not an EM wave, and your receiver will not pick it
up.


> of extremely weak 2 GHz AM analog carrier signals. In addition,
> this receiver is so sensitive and powerful that it can clearly pick up
> AM carrier waves as weak as 10-to-the-power-NEGATIVE-10,000
> watt-per-meter-squared.

Powerful is the wrong word.

What type of "selectiveity" does it have?? (moron)


> This receiver also has a robust signal processor
> that can eliminate clipped-waveforms [such as square waves], spikes,
> clicks, pops, hiss, and random noise

It can not eliminate random noise, idiot stufinagle.

>even at those trivial wattage
> levels. After eliminating those unwanted signals,


snip rest of trivial drivialings