Demodulation was first used in
radio receivers. In the
wireless telegraphy radio systems used during the first 3 decades of radio (1884–1914) the transmitter did not communicate audio (sound) but transmitted information in the form of pulses of radio waves that represented text messages in
Morse code. Therefore, the receiver merely had to detect the presence or absence of the radio signal, and produce a click sound. The device that did this was called a
detector. The first detectors were
coherers, simple devices that acted as a switch. The term
detector stuck, was used for other types of demodulators and continues to be used to the present day for a demodulator in a radio receiver. The first type of
modulation used to transmit sound over radio waves was
amplitude modulation (AM), invented by
Reginald Fessenden around 1900. An AM radio signal can be demodulated by
rectifying it to remove one side of the carrier, and then filtering to remove the radio-frequency component, leaving only the modulating audio component. This is equivalent to peak detection with a suitably long time constant. The
amplitude of the recovered audio frequency varies with the modulating audio signal, so it can drive an earphone or an audio amplifier. Fessendon invented the first AM demodulator in 1904 called the
electrolytic detector, consisting of a short needle dipping into a cup of dilute acid. The same year
John Ambrose Fleming invented the
Fleming valve or
thermionic diode which could also rectify an AM signal. == Techniques ==