thumb|Spectrum of a baseband signal, energy E per unit frequency as a function of frequency f. The total energy is the area under the curve.
thumb|Spectrum of a baseband signal, energy E per unit frequency as a function of frequency f. The total energy is the area under the curve.
In telecommunications and signal processing, baseband is the range of frequencies occupied by a signal that has not been modulated to higher frequencies. Baseband signals typically originate from transducers, converting some other variable into an electrical signal. For example, the electronic output of a microphone is a baseband signal that is analogous to the applied voice audio. In conventional analog radio broadcasting, the baseband audio signal is used to modulate an RF carrier signal of a much higher frequency.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).