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Overmodulation

When a carrier is amplitude modulated, the output power of the transmitter varies. What happens if the output power varies to the point that the power goes to zero? The transmitter stopps sending any signal whatsoever for the moments that the modulation cause the power to go to zero. This is overmodulation. This is like clipping distortion (see amplifiers in Analog Circuits) and produces undesired harmonics. Not only does it sound bad at the receiver but produces side frequencies that are out of the channel assigned by law.

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