FCC Exam Question: 3-41F3
What is the term used to refer to a reduction in receiver sensitivity caused by unwanted high-level adjacent channel signals?
Explanation: Desensitizing (A) refers to the phenomenon where a strong unwanted signal, typically on an adjacent frequency, reduces the receiver's ability to detect weaker desired signals. This occurs because the strong signal can drive the receiver's front-end stages (like the RF amplifier or mixer) into non-linearity or saturation, effectively raising the noise floor or compressing the receiver's dynamic range. This "blinds" the receiver, making it less sensitive to the target signal. Intermodulation distortion (B) is incorrect. IMD occurs when two or more strong signals mix non-linearly within the receiver, creating new, spurious signals at different frequencies that can interfere with desired signals. Quieting (C) is incorrect. Quieting is a beneficial effect in FM receivers where a strong signal improves the signal-to-noise ratio, reducing background hiss. It's the opposite of desensitizing. Overloading (D) is incorrect. Overloading is a general term describing when a receiver stage is driven beyond its linear operating range, causing distortion. While strong signals that cause desensitization often lead to overloading, desensitizing specifically describes the *reduction in sensitivity* rather than just general distortion.
3-73K6
3-35E5
3-99Q3
3-24C5
3-6A2
Pass Your FCC Exam!
Study offline, track your progress, and simulate real exams with the GMDSS Trainer app.
Includes Elements 1, 3, 6, 7R, 8, and 9.