I was standing less than 50 feet from the 500+ foot tower of a 50,000 watt FM station, and I was listening to my iPod. When I paused the music, I could hear the station's audio and a 60 hz hum on my iPod headphones. The loudness of the audio and the hum changed as I moved the headphone cord. The station and the hum disappeared when I was a few hundred feet away, and it got louder when I set the volume on the iPod to zero. It was also not present when I turned my iPod off completely.
I wonder how it's possible for the radio station to be demodulated by my iPod when it doesn't even have a tuner or transmitter. And I thought only AM stations show up in electronic devices because the changing amplitude of the signal induces a changing voltage and the changing voltage is the original audio. With FM, only the frequency changes with the modulation so I don't know how an electronic device would respond to the changing frequency to (unintentionally) demodulate the audio.
The station does not have IBOC and that tower only has one FM station.
Now I wonder how my iPod will react when I stand near a 50,000 watt AM tower.
I wonder how it's possible for the radio station to be demodulated by my iPod when it doesn't even have a tuner or transmitter. And I thought only AM stations show up in electronic devices because the changing amplitude of the signal induces a changing voltage and the changing voltage is the original audio. With FM, only the frequency changes with the modulation so I don't know how an electronic device would respond to the changing frequency to (unintentionally) demodulate the audio.
The station does not have IBOC and that tower only has one FM station.
Now I wonder how my iPod will react when I stand near a 50,000 watt AM tower.