Narrowband - translation to spanish
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Narrowband - translation to spanish

CONCEPT IN RADIO COMMUNICATIONS
Narrow-band

Narrowband         
Banda estrecha
narrow-band         
(n.) = banda estrecha
Ex: The terms "narrow-band" and "wide-band" are ill-defined but they are usually taken to describe bandwidths below and above the telephone circuit bandwidth of 3500 Hz.
frequency modulation         
  • alt=Animation of audio, AM and FM signals
  • An American FM radio transmitter in Buffalo, NY at [[WEDG]]
  • FM modulation
  • static]], while the FM receiver clearly reproduced a music program from Armstrong's experimental FM transmitter [[W2XMN]] in New Jersey.
  • Frequency spectrum and [[waterfall plot]] of a 146.52{{nbsp}}MHz carrier, frequency modulated by a 1,000{{nbsp}}Hz sinusoid.  The modulation index has been adjusted to around 2.4, so the carrier frequency has small amplitude. Several strong sidebands are apparent; in principle an infinite number are produced in FM but the higher-order sidebands are of negligible magnitude.
ENCODING OF INFORMATION IN A CARRIER WAVE BY VARYING THE INSTANTANEOUS FREQUENCY OF THE WAVE
Frequency modulated; Frequency Modulation; Frequency-modulated; Frequency-modulation; NFM; Frequency modulator; Wideband FM; F.m.; FM (modulation); Narrowband FM; Analog FM; Analog frequency modulation
modulación de frecuencia (transmisión de voces o fotos por frecuencia variable y fuerza constante, modulación según la frecuencia)

Definition

narrowband
<networking> A communication channel with a low data rate. [More specific?] The term is sometimes used for an Internet connection via a dial-up modem, typically at 56 kbaud, in contrast to broadband. (2003-10-15)

Wikipedia

Narrowband

Narrowband signals are signals that occupy a narrow range of frequencies or that have a small fractional bandwidth. In the audio spectrum, narrowband sounds are sounds that occupy a narrow range of frequencies. In telephony, narrowband is usually considered to cover frequencies 300–3400 Hz, i.e. the voiceband.

In radio communications, a narrowband channel is a channel in which the bandwidth of the message does not significantly exceed the channel's coherence bandwidth.

In the study of wired channels, narrowband implies that the channel under consideration is sufficiently narrow that its frequency response can be considered flat. The message bandwidth will therefore be less than the coherence bandwidth of the channel. That is, no channel has perfectly flat fading, but the analysis of many aspects of wireless systems is greatly simplified if flat fading can be assumed.


Examples of use of Narrowband
1. If this is the case, and a slower narrowband connection is used, the backpack leaps up to a whopping 5.5kg.
2. AP The top images were taken with a broadband filter and the lower ones with a narrowband filter, showing the dust particles The fan–shaped cloud of gas and dust flew outward at about 800 kph.
3. The study found out that in each of the top 10 countries, the time spent online by users with a broadband connection was substantially greater than the time spent by users with a narrowband connection.
4. Richard Benn, a Madeira–based management consultant, said: "If you set up a company in Madeira, where VAT is 15 per cent, to sell telecom services in, for example, Denmark, where VAT is 25 per cent, you gain a substantial price margin over a local operator." In 2002, Wanadoo, part of the French Telecom group, moved its unmetered, narrowband UK internet service, known as Anytime, to Madeira to take advantage of the island‘s lower VAT rate, which was then 13 per cent compared with 17.5 per cent in the UK.