A transmitter which broadcasts the signal by radio waves from the sound source to a receiver worn by the listener. Frequency modulation is especially useful in large indoor or outdoor locations, since it can cover several hundred feet and pass through physical obstructions.A transmitter which broadcasts the signal by radio waves from the sound source to a receiver worn by the listener. Frequency modulation is especially useful in large indoor or outdoor locations, since it can cover several hundred feet and pass through physical obstructions.In telecommunications and signal processing, frequency modulation (FM) is the encoding of information in a carrier wave by varying the instantaneous frequency of the wave. There is a difference between the instantaneous base and the base frequency of the carries in analogue signal applications. That difference is directly proportional to the instantaneous value of the input-signal amplitude.
Digital data can be encoded and transmitted via a carrier wave by shifting the carrier’s frequency among a predefined set of frequencies—a technique known as frequency-shift keying (FSK). FSK is widely used inmodems and fax modems, and can also be used to send Morse code.[1] Radioteletype also uses FSK.[2]
Frequency modulation is used in radio, telemetry, radar, seismic prospecting, and monitoring newborns for seizures via EEG.[3] FM is widely used for broadcasting music and speech, two-way radio systems, magnetic tape-recording systems and some video-transmission systems. In radio systems, frequency modulation with sufficient bandwidth provides an advantage in cancelling naturally-occurring noise.Frequency modulation is known as phase modulation when the carrier phase modulation is the time integral of the FM signal.