DanStrassberg said:Still, if you amplitude modulate a purely sinusoidal RF carrier with a purely sinusoidal audio signal (and do not exceed--or even quite equal 100% modulation on negative peaks), the frequency spectrum of the modulated RF carrier includes components at the sum and difference frequencies. No such components exist in the spectra of the separate RF and audio signals. Doesn't this suggest that a nonlinear operation has taken place? Also, the most straightforward (note that I said straightforward--no intention to pass judgment on practicality in real-world situations) purely analog technique for mixing the audio and RF signals to produce a modulated RF carrier is the use of a transconductance multiplier, which the baseband analog folks consider to be the quintessential NONLINEAR active-circuit element. No question that FM is--if you will--MORE nonlinear than AM, but is AM PURELY a linear operation?
It has been more than half a century since I was an EE undergrad, but I vaguely recall being told that AM could not be implemented using purely linear circuit techniques. For sure it can't be implemented using purely passive circuit elements (in Prof Guillemin's terminology, LLFPB--lumped, linear, finite, passive, and bilateral). In practical terms, that came down to resistors, capacitors, and inductors without ferromagnetic cores. Electrolytic capacitors (and ultracapacitors, which didn't exist back then), should also be eliminated.
What is linear in AM is the modulation, which is where the information lies. Yes, AM is created by a multiplication process, which is arguably nonlinear. However, the sidebands obey the scaling and superposition principles required for a system to be linear. This is even true when the carrier is not suppressed because the carrier can be considered to be a DC term in the modulation.
One might think of the superposition and scaling behavior AM modulation as a example of the distributive law of algebra, as illustrated by
a (b + c) = a b + a c
a (2 b) = 2 (a b)
In this case, "a" would be the carrier and "b" and "c" would be two Fourier components of the modulation. The essential reason why AM modulation is linear is that the carrier, a, has constant amplitude and frequency.