1200 Sq Ft 3BHK Beautiful Two-Storey House

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2341

For example, in a radio broadcasting station the station’s large power amplifier is the transmitter; and the broadcasting antenna is the interface between the power amplifier and the “free space channel”. The free space channel is the transmission medium; and the receiver’s antenna is the interface between the free space channel and the receiver. Next, the radio receiver is the destination of the radio signal, and this is where it is converted from electricity to sound for people to listen to.

Sometimes, telecommunication systems are with a single box of electronics working as both the transmitter and a receiver, or a transceiver. For example, a cellular telephone is a transceiver.The transmission electronics and the receiver electronics within a transceiver are actually quite independent of each other. This can be readily explained by the fact that radio transmitters contain power amplifiers that operate with electrical powers measured in watts or kilowatts, but radio receivers deal with radio powers that are measured in the microwatts or nanowatts. Hence, transceivers have to be carefully designed and built to isolate their high-power circuitry and their low-power circuitry from each other, as to not cause interference.

Telecommunications in which multiple transmitters and multiple receivers have been designed to cooperate and to share the same physical channel are called multiplex systems. The sharing of physical channels using multiplexing often gives very large reductions in costs. Multiplexed systems are laid out in telecommunication networks, and the multiplexed signals are switched at nodes through to the correct destination terminal receiver.

Total Area : 1200 Square Feet

Ground Floor :
Sit out
Living room
Dining area
2 Bedroom
1 Attached bathroom
1 Common bathroom
Kitchen
Work area

First Floor :
Small upper passage
1 Bedroom with attached bathroom
Open terrace

The term “channel” has two different meanings. In one meaning, a channel is the physical medium that carries a signal between the transmitter and the receiver. Examples of this include the atmosphere for sound communications, glass optical fibers for some kinds of optical communications, coaxial cables for communications by way of the voltages and electric currents in them, and free space for communications using visible light, infrared waves, ultraviolet light, and radio waves. Coaxial cable types are classified by RG type or “radio guide”, terminology derived from World War II.