Overlap zone

In radio frequency engineering, an overlap zone occurrs where signals from two or more radio stations, transmitting at the same frequency, can be received with comparable intensity. Interference occurs frequently in such a zone.

In order to avoid this, a receiver with directional antenna is used, which can then be aligned in such a way that it will only receive the signal of one transmitter. Alternatively, the signals could be separated using a demodulator in single sideband mode.

With digital radio (Digital Radio Mondiale and Digital Audio Broadcasting being two common types), there is no interference in the overlap zone.


References


    1 - Multifunctional Ultrawideband Antennas Trends, Techniques and Applications By Chinmoy Saha, Jawad Y. Siddiqui, and Yahia M.M. Antar - 2019. P.3 - P.11 - P.46, 47 - P.65.

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.