Modulator and Demodulator (conceptual question)?

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A sinusoidal signal of 3kHz passing through a modulator and demodulator may not output an exact replica of the original signal, particularly in amplitude. While a perfect system would maintain both frequency and amplitude, real-world systems often result in attenuation, leading to a lower output amplitude. The discussion highlights that the expected amplitude of A/4 was based on an ideal circuit diagram provided in class. The actual output was observed to be 1/10 of the original amplitude, prompting questions about the modulation type and system specifics. Understanding the gain characteristics of both the modulator and demodulator is crucial for accurate signal reproduction.
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Just a quick conceptual question.

If you have a sinusoidal signal of 3kHz with an amplitude of A, and it's going through a modulator, and then going through a demodulator, must the output of the modulator resemble exactly to the original signal?

The reason why I am asking is because when I was doing this in my lab, the output of the modulator had the same frequency of the original signal, but 1/10 of the Amplitude.

I thought it would have A/4 instead.

Comments?
 
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It all depends on your system.

A perfect modulator and demodulator would result in an output that exactly matched the original signal.

In reality the demodulator stage may be such that you get a demodulated signal has an attenuated amplitude. Ideally this attenuation would be known and linear so that you can amplify the signal back to its original state.

So I guess I would say I need more detail to really answer better than that. Why did you expect A/4 to begin with? What type of modulation were you performing?
 
Never mind, I just calculated the gain for the modulator and demodulator.

The reason I thought it would be A/4 is because I remembered the professor gave us an ideal circuit diagram that had a specified gain value for both the modulator and demodulator.

Thank you for your input!
 
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