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Page Title: Appendix I Glossary
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Information Systems Technician Training Series, Module 4 - Communications Hardware
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Appendix I Glossary

APPENDIX  I GLOSSARY A ANTENNA—  A device used to radiate or  receive  radio waves. ANTENNA COUPLER— A device used for impedance matching (tuning) between an antenna and a transmitter or receiver. ANTENNA RECIPROCITY—  The ability  of an antenna to both transmit and receive  electromagnetic  energy. ANTENNA TUNING—  The process where an antenna is electrically “matched” to the output frequency and impedance of the transmitter. ATTENUATION—  A deliberate reduction or an unintended loss in RF signal strength. B BANDWIDTH—  Any section of the frequency spectrum occupied by specific signals. BIDIRECTIONAL ANTENNA—  An antenna that radiates in or receives most of its energy from only two directions. BLACK— Cipher text or encrypted text or information C CARRIER— The  unmodulated  signal  originally  produced in the oscillator section of a transmitter. CARRIER FREQUENCY— The final RF output without modulation.  The  assigned  transmitter  frequency. CHANNEL—  A carrier frequency assignment, usually with a fixed bandwidth. COMPLEX WAVE— A transmitted radio signal composed of different frequencies. COUNTERPOISE—  The ground plane, or reflective surface, comprising an antenna’s reflected image at a given  wavelength. CRITICAL  FREQUENCY—  The  highest  transmitted frequency  that  can  be  propagated  directly  upward  and still be bent, or “refracted,” back to Earth. CYCLE— Two  complete  alternations  of  alternating  current, or one complete revolution in any period of time, equal to 360°. D DAMA (DEMAND  ASSIGNED  MULTIPLE  ACCESS SUBSYSTEM)—  Subsystem  that  multiplexes  several subsystems on one satellite channel. DIFFRACTION— The bending of radio waves around the edges of a solid objector dense mass. DIRECTIONAL  ANTENNA—  An antenna that  radiates or receives radio waves more effectively in some directions than in others. DIRECTIVITY— The sharpness or narrowness of an antenna’s  radiation  pattern  in  a  given  plan. DIRECT  WAVE—  A radio signal that travels in a direct line-of-sight  path  from  the  transmitting  antenna  to  the receiving  antenna. DUMMY LOAD— A nonradiating device used at the end of a transmission line in place of an antenna for tuning a transmitter, The dummy load converts transmitted energy into heat so that no energy is radiated outward or reflected back. E EHF (EXTREMELY HIGH FREQUENCY)— The band of frequencies from 30 GHz to 300 GHz. ELECTRIC FIELD—  A field produced as a result of a voltage charge on an antenna. ELECTROMAGNETIC ENERGY—  An RF source composed of both an electric and a magnetic field. ELECTROMAGNETIC  WAVES—  Energy  produced  at the output of a transmitter; also called radio waves. F FADING— Variation, usually gradual, in the field strength of a radio signal that is caused by changes in the transmission path or medium. AI-1

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