cymoscope - meaning and definition. What is cymoscope
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What (who) is cymoscope - definition

DEVICE OR CIRCUIT THAT EXTRACTS INFORMATION FROM A MODULATED RADIO FREQUENCY CURRENT OR VOLTAGE
Detector (electronics); Signal detector; Quadrature detector; Slope detector; Slope detection; Discriminator detector; Quadrature detection; Cymoscope; Electric wave detector; Frequency discriminator; FM detector; Detector radio; Detector radio receiver; Detector receiver
  •  A ratio detector using solid-state diodes
  • A simple envelope detector
  • A simple crystal radio with no tuned circuit can be used to listen to strong AM broadcast signals
  • A coherer detector, useful only for Morse code signals.

Cymoscope         
·add. ·noun Any device for detecting the presence of electric waves. The influence of electric waves on the resistance of a particular kind of electric circuit, on the magnetization of steel, on the polarization of an electrolytic cell, or on the electric condition of a vacuum has been applied in the various cymoscopes.
Zymosimeter         
MICROBIOLOGICAL METHOD REGARDING FERMENTATION
Zymometer; Zymosimeter
·noun An instrument for ascertaining the degree of fermentation occasioned by the mixture of different liquids, and the degree of heat which they acquire in fermentation.
Zymometer         
MICROBIOLOGICAL METHOD REGARDING FERMENTATION
Zymometer; Zymosimeter
·noun ·Alt. of Zymosimeter.

Wikipedia

Detector (radio)

In radio, a detector is a device or circuit that extracts information from a modulated radio frequency current or voltage. The term dates from the first three decades of radio (1888-1918). Unlike modern radio stations which transmit sound (an audio signal) on an uninterrupted carrier wave, early radio stations transmitted information by radiotelegraphy. The transmitter was switched on and off to produce long or short periods of radio waves, spelling out text messages in Morse code. Therefore, early radio receivers did not have to demodulate the radio signal, but just distinguish between the presence or absence of a radio signal, to reproduce the Morse code "dots" and "dashes". The device that performed this function in the receiver circuit was called a detector. A variety of different detector devices, such as the coherer, electrolytic detector, magnetic detector and the crystal detector, were used during the wireless telegraphy era until superseded by vacuum tube technology.

After the invention of amplitude modulation (AM) enabled the development of AM radiotelephony, the transmission of sound (audio), during World War 1, the term evolved to mean a demodulator, (usually a vacuum tube) which extracted the audio signal from the radio frequency carrier wave. This is its current meaning, although modern detectors usually consist of semiconductor diodes, transistors, or integrated circuits.

In a superheterodyne receiver the term is also sometimes used to refer to the mixer, the tube or transistor which converts the incoming radio frequency signal to the intermediate frequency. The mixer is called the first detector, while the demodulator that extracts the audio signal from the intermediate frequency is called the second detector. In microwave and millimeter wave technology the terms detector and crystal detector refer to waveguide or coaxial transmission line components, used for power or SWR measurement, that typically incorporate point contact diodes or surface barrier Schottky diodes.