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FM broadcasting is a broadcasting technology invented by Edwin Howard Armstrong that uses frequency modulation (FM) to provide
high-fidelity sound over broadcast radio.
Broadcast bands
The original FM broadcast band in the
United States until 1946 was on 42 to 50 MHz with 0.2 MHz channel spacing. This band was abandoned after
World War II and is now allocated to fixed, mobile, and land mobile radio services.
The term "FM band" can upset purists, because it conflates a modulation scheme with a range of frequencies. It is effectively shorthand for 'frequency band in which FM is used for broadcasting'. The exact range of frequencies used varies around the world, but always falls within the VHF part of the radio spectrum. The term "VHF" was previously in common use for "FM" within the EU. ("UKW," which stands for "Ultrakurzwellen" in German, meaning "ultra short wave", is still widely used in Germany.)
Broadcast bands around the world
Throughout the world, the broadcast band is 87.5 to 108.0 MHz, or some portion thereof. In the U.S. it is 87.8 to 108.0 MHz.
Japan is the only exception, using the 76 to 90 MHz band with 0.1 MHz channel spacing.
In the
Commonwealth of Independent States, and some
Eastern Bloc nations, an additional older band from 65.9 to 74 MHz is also used. Assigned frequencies are at intervals of 30 kHz. This band, sometimes referred to as the OIRT band, is slowly being phased out in many countries.
The frequency of an FM broadcast station (more strictly its assigned nominal centre frequency) is usually an exact multiple of 100 kHz. In most of
the Americas and the Caribbean, only odd multiples are used. In some parts of
Europe, Greenland and
Africa, only even multiples are used. In
Italy, "half-channel" multiples of 50 kHz are used. There are other unusual and obsolete standards in some countries, including 0.001, 0.01, 0.03, 0.074, and 0.3 MHz.
For more information on FM frequency allocations, see FM broadcast band.
Technical characteristics
Pre-emphasis and de-emphasis
Random
noise has a 'triangular' frequency spectrum distribution in an FM system, with the effect that noise occurs predominantly at the highest frequency within the baseband. This can be offset, to a limited extent, by boosting the high frequencies before transmission (telecommunications) and reducing them by a corresponding amount in the receiver. Reducing the high frequencies in the receiver also reduces the high-frequency noise. These processes of boosting and then reducing certain frequencies are known as
preemphasis and deemphasis , respectively.
The amount of pre-emphasis and de-emphasis used is defined by the
time constant of a simple RC circuit circuit. In most of the world a 50 µs time constant is used. In North America, 75 µs is used. This applies to both monaural and stereophonic sound transmissions and to baseband audio (not the subcarriers).
The amount of pre-emphasis that can be applied is limited by the fact that many forms of contemporary music contain more high-frequency energy than the musical styles which prevailed at the birth of FM broadcasting. They cannot be pre-emphasized as much because it would cause excessive deviation of the FM
carrier wave. (Systems more modern than FM broadcasting tend to use either programme-dependent variable pre-emphasis, e.g., dbx (noise reduction) in the Multichannel television sound TV sound system, or none at all.)
The problems with pre-emphasis due to the high frequency energy in modern music can be greatly attenuated using psychoacoustics principles, as Oscar Bonello demonstrates in his March 2007 AES paper. A new device, the IM cancelled high frequency clipper, is able to produce heavy audio clipping at high audio frequencies, with low listener fatigue.Oscar Bonello, Multiband audio processing and its influence on the coverage area of FM stereo transmission, AES Journal, New York, March 2007A previous version of this paper is available at http://www.solidynepro.com/documentos/JAES-07-ENG.pdf
FM stereo
In the early 1960s, several systems to add stereo to FM radio were considered by the FCC. Included were systems from 14 proponents including Crosley, Halstead, Zenith Electronics Corporation and General Electric. The individual systems were evaluated for their strengths and weaknesses. The Crosley system was rejected by the FCC because it degraded the signal to noise ratio of the main channel and did not perform well under multipath RF conditions. In addition it did not allow for SCA services because of its wide FM subcarrier bandwidth. The Halstead system was rejected due to lack of high frequency stereo separation and reduction in the main channel signal to noise ratio. The GE and Zenith systems were so close that they were combined and became the standard stereo FM broadcasting method in the USA and most other countries.
It is important that stereo broadcasts should be compatible with mono receivers. For this reason, the left (L) and right (R) channels are algebraically encoded into sum (L+R) and difference (L-R) signals. A mono receiver will use just the L+R signal so the listener will hear both channels in the single loudspeaker. A stereo receiver will add the L+R and L-R signals to recover the Left channel, and subtract the L+R and L-R signals to recover the Right channel.
The (L+R) Main channel signal is transmitted as baseband Sound in the range of 30 Hz to 15 kHz. The (L-R) Sub-channel L-R signal is modulated onto a 38 kHz
double-sideband suppressed carrier (DSBSC) signal occupying the baseband range of 23 to 53 kHz.
A 19 kHz pilot tone, at exactly half the 38 kHz subcarrier frequency and with a precisely defined phase relationship to it, is also generated. This is transmitted at 8-10% of overall modulation level and used by the receiver to regenerate the 38 kHz subcarrier with the correct phase.
The final multiplex signal from the
stereo generator contains the Main Channel (L+R), the pilot tone, and the sub-channel (L-R). This composite signal, along with any other subcarriers (SCA), modulates the FM transmitter.
Converting the multiplex signal back into left and right audio signals is performed by a stereo decoder, which is built into stereo receivers.
In order to preserve stereo separation, it is normal practice to apply pre-emphasis to the left and right channels before encoding, and to apply de-emphasis at the receiver after decoding.
Stereo FM signals are more susceptible to noise and multipath distortion than are mono FM signals. This is due to imbalance of FM sideband ratios of the additional modulating signals created by the pilot tone and the sub-carrier channel.
In addition, for a given RF level at the receiver, the signal to noise ratio for the stereo signal will be worse than for the mono receiver. The point at which the receiver input RF level reaches maximum monaural signal to noise ratio will be 23 dB lower then the receiver input RF level for maximum stereo signal to noise ratio. For this reason many FM stereo receivers include a stereo/mono switch to allow listening in mono when reception conditions are less than ideal, and most car radios are arranged to reduce the separation as the S/N ratio worsens, eventually going to mono while still indicating a stereo signal is being received.
Quadraphonic FM
In 1969 Louis Dorren invented the Quadraplex system of single station, discrete, compatible four-channel FM broadcasting. There are actually two additional subcarriers in the Quadraplex system, not just one as commonly believed. The baseband layout is as follows:
50 Hz to 15 kHz Main Channel (Sum of all 4 channels) (LF+LB+RF+RB) signal, for Mono FM listening compatibility.
19 kHz Pilot synchronizing signal
23 to 53 kHz (sine Quadrant Subcarrier) (LF+LB) - (RF+RB) Left minus Right difference signal. This signal's modulation in algebraic sum and difference with the Main channel was used for 2 channel stereo listener compatibility.
23 to 53 kHz (cosine Quadrant Subcarrier) (LF+RF) - (LB+RB) Front minus Back difference signal. This signal's modulation in algebraic sum and difference with the Main channel and all the other subcarriers is used for the Quadraphonic listener.
61 to 91 kHz (sine Quadrant Subcarrier) (LF+RB) - (LB+RF) difference signal. This is the Diagonal difference signal. This signal's modulation in algebraic sum and difference with the main channel and all the other subcarriers is also used for the Quadraphonic listener.
95 kHz SCA subcarrier, phase locked to 19 kHz pilot, for reading services for the blind, background music, etc.
There were several variations on this system submitted by GE, Zenith, RCA, and Denon for testing and consideration during the National Quadraphonic Radio Committee field trials for the FCC. The original Dorren Quadraplex System outperformed all the others and was chosen as the national standard for Quadraphonic FM broadcasting in the United States.
Other subcarrier services
The subcarrier system has been further extended to add other services. Initially these were private analog audio channels which could be used internally or rentinged out.
Radio reading services for the blindness are also still common, and there were experiments with quadraphonic sound. If Stereo on a station, everything from 23 kHz on up can be used for other services. The guard band around 19 kHz (±4 kHz) must still be maintained, so as not to trigger stereo decoders on receivers. If there is stereo, there will typically be a guard band between the upper limit of the DSBSC stereo signal (53 kHz) and the lower limit of any other subcarrier.
Digital services are now also available. A 57 kHz subcarrier (phase-locked loop to the third harmonic of the stereo pilot tone) is used to carry a low-bandwidth digital
Radio Data System signal, providing extra features such as
Alternate frequency (AF) and Network (NN). This
narrowband signal runs at only 1187.5 bits per second, thus is only suitable for text. A few proprietary systems are used for private communications. A variant of RDS is the North American Radio Data System or "Smart radio" system while in Germany a system called ARI is used for broadcasting traffic announcements to motorists (without disturbing other listeners) RDS is designed to be capable of being used alongside ARI despite using identical subcarrier frequencies.
The
United States is the only country attempting to put
digital radio onto FM rather than using Digital Audio Broadcasting like most other countries (including
Canada), or
ISDB like
Japan. This
in-band on-channel approach results in highly-
audio data compression, and blocks any opportunity for new stations to broadcast. The proprietary iBiquity system,
branded as "HD Radio", uses subcarriers and extends out somewhat into the
sidebands. The hybrid digital (hence "HD") system can later take the bandwidth used by the current analog stereo system, and eventually go all-digital, though this would shut out every existing analog radio.
In the USA services (other than Stereo, Quad and RDS) using subcarriers are sometimes referred to as SCA (subsidiary communications authorisation) services. Uses for such subcarriers include book/newspaper reading services for blind listeners, Private data transmission services (For example sending stock market information to stockbrokers or stolen credit card number blacklists to stores) Subscription commercial-free background music services for shops, Paging ("beeper") services and providing a program feed for AM transmitters of AM/FM stations. SCA subcarriers are typically 67 kHz and 92 kHz.
Dolby FM
A commercially unsuccessful Audio noise reduction system used with FM radio in some countries during the late 1970s, Dolby FM used a modified 25 µs pre-emphasis time constant and a frequency selective companding arrangement to reduce noise. See: Dolby noise reduction system.
Adoption of FM broadcasting worldwide
Despite having been developed in the 1940s, FM broadcasting took a long time to be adopted by the majority of radio listeners.
The first FM broadcasting stations were in the United States, but initially they were primarily used to broadcast classical music to an upmarket listenership in urban areas and for educational programming. By the late 1960s FM had been adopted by fans of "alternative rock" music, but it wasn't until 1978 (the first year that listenership to FM stations exceeded that of AM stations) that FM became mainstream. During the 1980s and 1990s, Top 40 music stations and later even country music stations largely abandoned AM for FM. Today AM is mainly the preserve of talk radio, religious programming, ethnic (minority language) broadcasting and some types of minority interest music. Ironically, this shift has transformed AM into the "alternative band" that FM once was.
Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark and particularly West Germany were among the first countries to adopt FM on a widespread scale. Among the reasons for this were:
The medium wave band in Western Europe is heavily overcrowded, leading to severe interference problems and, as a result, most MW frequencies are suitable only for speech broadcasting.
Particularly in Germany after World War II, the best available medium wave frequencies were used by the Allied occupation forces both for broadcasting American Forces Network and for broadcasting cold war propaganda across the Iron curtain
The regional structure of German broadcasting meant that the few remaining AM frequencies available for civilian domestic broadcasting fell far short of the number required and the broadcasters looked to FM as an alternative.
Public service broadcasters in
Ireland and
Australia were far slower at adopting FM radio than those in either North America or continental
Europe.However, in Ireland several unlicenced commercial FM stations were on air by the mid-1980s. These generally simulcast on AM and FM.
In the United Kingdom, the
BBC began FM broadcasting in 1955, with three national networks carrying the Light Programme, Third Programme and Home Service (renamed Radio 2, Radio 3 and Radio 4 respectively in 1967). These three networks used the sub-band 88.0 - 94.6 MHz. The sub-band 94.6 to 97.6 MHz was later used for BBC and local commercial services. Only when commercial broadcasting was introduced to the UK in 1973 did the use of FM pick up in Britain. With the gradual clearance of other users (notably Public Services such as police, fire and ambulance) and the extension of the FM band to 108.0 MHz between 1980 and 1995, FM expanded rapidly throughout the British Isles and effectively took over from LW and MW as the delivery platform of choice for fixed and portable domestic and vehicle-based receivers.
In addition, Ofcom (previously the Radio Authority) in the UK issues on demand Restrictive Service Licences on FM and also on AM (MW) for short-term local-coverage broadcasting which is open to anyone who does not carry a prohibition and can put up the appropriate licensing and royalty fees. In 2006 almost 500 such licenses were issued.
FM started in Australia in 1947 but did not catch on and was shut down in 1961 to expand the television band. It was not reopened until 1975. Subsequently, it developed steadily until in the 1980s many AM stations transferred to FM because of its superior sound quality. Today, as elsewhere in the developed world, most Australian broadcasting is on FM - although AM talk stations are still very popular.
Most other countries expanded their use of FM through the 1990s. Because it takes a large number of FM transmitting stations to cover a geographically large country, particularly where there are terrain difficulties, FM is more suited to local broadcasting than national networks. In such countries, particularly where there are economic or infrastructural problems, "rolling out" a national FM broadcast network to reach the majority of the population can be a slow and expensive process.
ITU Conferences about FM
The frequencies available for FM were decided by some important conferences of
ITU.The milestone of those conferences is the Stockholm agreement of 1961 among 38 countries.
- Final acts of the conference
http://www.itu.int/publications/publications.aspx?lang=en&media=electronic&parent=R-ACT-RRC.1-1961
Small-scale use of the FM broadcast band
TuneCast II FM microtransmitter
Consumer use of FM transmitter (personal device)
In some countries, small-scale (
Part 15 (FCC rules) in United States terms) transmitters are available that can transmit a signal from an audio device (usually an MP3 player or similar) to a standard FM radio receiver; such devices range from small units built to carry audio to a car radio with no audio-in capability (often formerly provided by special adapters for audio cassette decks, which are becoming less and less common on car radio designs) up to full-sized, near-professional-grade broadcasting systems that can be used to transmit audio throughout a property. Most such units transmit in full stereo, though some models designed for beginner hobbyists may not. Similar transmitters are often included in satellite radio receivers and some toys.
Legality of these devices varies by country. The FCC in the US and
Industry Canada allow them. Starting on
1 Oct 2006 these devices became legal in most countries in the
European Union. Devices made to the harmonised European specification became legal in the
United Kingdom on 8 Dec 2006.http://www.ofcom.org.uk/media/news/2006/11/nr_20061123bChange to the law to allow the use of low power FM transmitters for MP3 players (retrieved from Ofcom web site Dec 7, 2006)
FM radio microphones
The FM broadcast band can also be used by some inexpensive wireless
microphones, but professional-grade wireless microphones generally use bands in the
Ultra high frequency region so they can run on dedicated equipment without broadcast interference. Such inexpensive wireless microphones are generally sold as toys for
karaoke or similar purposes, allowing the user to use an FM radio as an output rather than a dedicated amplifier and speaker.
Microbroadcasting
Low-power transmitters such as those mentioned above are also sometimes used for neighborhood or campus radio stations, though campus radio stations are often run over
carrier current. This is generally considered a form of
microbroadcasting. As a general rule, enforcement towards low-power FM stations is stricter than AM stations due to issues such as the
capture effect, and as a result, FM microbroadcasters generally do not reach as far as their AM competitors.
Clandestine use of FM transmitters
FM transmitters have been used to construct miniature wireless microphones for espionage and surveillance purposes (covert listening devices or so-called "bugs"); the advantage to using the FM broadcast band for such operations is that the receiving equipment would not be considered particularly suspect. Common practice is to tune the bug's transmitter off the ends of the broadcast band, into what in the United States would be TV channel 6 (107.9); most FM radios with analog tuners have sufficient overcoverage to pick up these beyond-outermost frequencies, although many digitally-tuned radios do not.
Constructing a "bug" is a common early project for electronics hobbyists, and project kits to do so are available from a wide variety of sources. The devices constructed, however, are often too large and poorly shielded for use in clandestine activity.
In addition, much pirate radio activity is broadcast in the FM range, due to the band's greater clarity and listenership.
Notes
See also
FM broadcasting by country
FM broadcasting (technical)
Lists
- List of broadcast station classes
- Lists of radio stations in North and Central America
History
- Oldest radio station
- History of radio
External links
Related technical content
-
- Introduction to FM MPX
- Stereo Multiplexing for Dummies Graphs that show waveforms at different points in the FM Multiplex process
- Factbook list of stations worldwide
- Invention History - The Father of FM
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FM broadcasting - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
FM broadcasting is a broadcast technology invented by Edwin Howard Armstrong that uses frequency modulation (FM) to provide high-fidelity sound over broadcast radio.