Learning module

Radio Waves

Radio uses electromagnetic waves to carry information through space.

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ElectroLab AI teaches theory, low-voltage electronics, and planning concepts. Mains voltage, switchboards, fixed wiring, high-current systems, and legal electrical work must only be performed by licensed electricians where required.

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Mark lessons as complete as you work through the bench checks, then use the quiz to test the ideas.

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Radio Waves

Start here

Build the crystal radio project and change the coil tap or capacitor position to feel how tuning behaves.

Key ideas

Radio waves are electromagnetic waves that travel through space at nearly the speed of light.

Frequency determines wavelength and strongly affects antenna size and propagation.

An LC circuit can resonate at a chosen frequency, which is the basis of simple tuning.

AM, FM, and digital radio use different methods to put information onto a carrier wave.

Useful formulas

Wavelength = 300,000,000 / frequency

Resonance: f = 1 / (2pi sqrt(LC))

Quarter-wave antenna ~= wavelength / 4

Bench checks

Use the RLC calculator to estimate a tuning circuit.

Keep antenna experiments clear of power lines.

Compare radio reception with short and longer low-voltage-safe antennas.

Common mistakes

Ignoring antenna and ground quality.

Expecting exact tuning from parts with wide tolerance.

Putting outdoor antennas near overhead electrical services.

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