radio receiver - translation to English
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radio receiver - translation to English

RADIO DEVICE FOR RECEIVING RADIO WAVES AND CONVERTING THEM TO A USEFUL SIGNAL
Audio receiver; Receiver (home stereo); Receiver (electronics); Stereo reciever; Radio cassette players; Portable radio; Portable radio-CD; Radio/CD player; Am fm radio; Stereo receiver; 📻; Radio receivers; History of radio receivers; Receiver (radio); Radio (receiver); AM/FM; AM/FM radio; Portable radios
  • Symbol for an antenna
  • Circuit of single tube Armstrong regenerative receiver
  • Coherer from 1904 as developed by Marconi.
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  • De Forest's first commercial Audion receiver, the RJ6 which came out in 1914. The Audion tube was always mounted upside down, with its delicate filament loop hanging down, so it did not sag and touch the other electrodes in the tube.
  • Block diagram of a dual-conversion superheterodyne receiver
  • Electrolytic detector
  • [[Guglielmo Marconi]], who built the first radio receivers, with his early spark transmitter ''(right)'' and coherer receiver ''(left)'' from the 1890s. The receiver records the Morse code on paper tape
  • chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PzzLAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA89}}</ref>
  • Fessenden's heterodyne radio receiver circuit
  • A modern [[communications receiver]], used in [[two-way radio]] communication stations to talk with remote locations by [[shortwave radio]].
  • A galena cat's whisker detector from a 1920s [[crystal radio]]
  • A bedside [[clock radio]] that combines a radio receiver with an [[alarm clock]]
  • Unlike today, when almost all radios use a variation of the superheterodyne design, during the 1920s vacuum tube radios used a variety of competing circuits.
  • Example of transatlantic radiotelegraph message recorded on paper tape by a [[siphon recorder]] at RCA's New York receiving center in 1920. The translation of the Morse code is given below the tape.
  • Block diagram of simple single tube reflex receiver
  • Block diagram of regenerative receiver
  • Marconi's inductively coupled coherer receiver from his controversial April 1900 "four circuit" patent no. 7,777.
  • A portable battery-powered AM/FM broadcast receiver, used to listen to audio broadcast by local [[radio station]]s.
  • Block diagram of a superheterodyne receiver. The dotted line indicates that the RF filter and local oscillator must be tuned in tandem.
  • selectivity]] to reject stations on adjacent frequencies, multiple cascaded bandpass filter stages had to be used. The dotted line indicates that the bandpass filters must be tuned together.
  • During the "[[Golden Age of Radio]]" (1920 to 1950), families gathered to listen to the home radio in the evening, such as this Zenith console model 12-S-568 from 1938, a 12-tube superheterodyne with pushbutton tuning and 12-inch cone speaker.
  • A Zenith transistor based portable radio receiver

radio receiver         
receptor de radio
portable radio         
radio portátil, radio a transistor (radio pequeña que se lleva a cualquier lugar)
radio         
  • Comparison of AM and FM modulated radio waves
  • [[Frequency]] spectrum of a typical modulated AM or FM radio signal.  It consists of a component ''C'' at the [[carrier wave]] frequency <math>f_c</math> with the information ([[modulation]]) contained in two narrow bands of frequencies called [[sideband]]s (''SB'') just above and below the carrier frequency.
  • Rotating marine radar antenna on a ship
  • Radio communication.  Information such as sound is converted by a transducer such as a [[microphone]] to an electrical signal, which modulates a [[radio wave]] produced by the [[transmitter]]. A receiver intercepts the radio wave and extracts the information-bearing modulation signal, which is converted back to a human usable form with another transducer such as a [[loudspeaker]].
  • Volkswagen's RNS-510 receiver supports [[Sirius Satellite Radio]].
  • Wildlife officer tracking radio-tagged mountain lion
  • Neighborhood wireless WAN router on telephone pole
  • shows its own photo]]
TECHNOLOGY OF SIGNALING AND COMMUNICATING USING RADIO WAVES
Radio transmission; Radio communications; Radiocommunication; RADIO; Terrestrial Radio; Radio communication; Radios; Radio communication system; Radio technician; Radio technology; Radio mechanic; Radio data communication; Applications of radio; Radiocommunications
la radio

Definition

Radioreceptor
un receptor de estímulos producidos por la energía radiante como la luz o el calor. Un receptor que puede unirse a un radioligando o a una ligando no radioactivo

Wikipedia

Radio receiver

In radio communications, a radio receiver, also known as a receiver, a wireless, or simply a radio, is an electronic device that receives radio waves and converts the information carried by them to a usable form. It is used with an antenna. The antenna intercepts radio waves (electromagnetic waves of radio frequency) and converts them to tiny alternating currents which are applied to the receiver, and the receiver extracts the desired information. The receiver uses electronic filters to separate the desired radio frequency signal from all the other signals picked up by the antenna, an electronic amplifier to increase the power of the signal for further processing, and finally recovers the desired information through demodulation.

Radio receivers are essential components of all systems that use radio. The information produced by the receiver may be in the form of sound, video (television), or digital data. A radio receiver may be a separate piece of electronic equipment, or an electronic circuit within another device. The most familiar type of radio receiver for most people is a broadcast radio receiver, which reproduces sound transmitted by radio broadcasting stations, historically the first mass-market radio application. A broadcast receiver is commonly called a "radio". However radio receivers are very widely used in other areas of modern technology, in televisions, cell phones, wireless modems, radio clocks and other components of communications, remote control, and wireless networking systems.

Examples of use of radio receiver
1. All you need is a cheap shortwave–radio receiver, the kind available at any drugstore.
2. Undercover PC who says a tiny radio receiver inserted in her ear caused tinnitus sues the Metropolitan Police and receives 175,000.
3. A fee–paying consumer with a valid mailing address in the contiguous 48 US states can buy a satellite radio receiver and listen to it across Canada.
4. The 512 megabyte Shuffle now retails for $6', with a one gigabyte model for $''. The Ditty also included a 1–inch LCD display screen and an FM radio receiver.
5. Larry Greer of Oakton listens every morning and afternoon to light rock and new age music through the XM radio receiver he installed in his Buick Lacrosse in 2005.