An update in my knowledge:
Here's some digital signals on VHF I hear on my TV radio:
I think FM is not in use for DTV in the U.S. and instead 8 bit vestigial side band modulation (8VSB) is used, with 3 different voltage levels for 3 mark states and each mark state can carry a one or a zero so 2 bits ^ 3 mark states = 8 total bits.
8VSB images:
http://www.theonlineengineer.org/TheOLEBLOG/8vsb-a-tutorial/
Center frequency offset slightly from the lower side band edge with almost the whole 6 MHZ as the upper side band.
However, I read a paper by an electronics engineer named Benjamin Mueller that says that an analog frequency modulation carrier can be used to encase OFDM data carriers to protect from doppler shift and amplitude modulated noises.
So perhaps OFDM DTV in Europe does use an analog FM carrier.
OFDM DTV images:
At least in the images, it does appear that the OFDM carriers when all combined together resemble having a center frequency with energy drifting to the right and to the left of the center frequency, either double side band AM modulation or FM modulation, and double side band AM modulation is not used for DTV.
DSB modulation would have double the bandwidth of FM modulation (compared to VSB modulation) with non of the benefits of FM modulation.
I have a TV radio that was designed for listening to TV audio before the digital transition (it will play audio even if there is no video signal, unlike my TV that won't play audio without a video signal, so if I connect a CD player to my TV I also must connect a video signal like the test signal from a DVD player), and I hear beeping and buzzing digital tones on apparently 7 channels on the High VHF band above and below the weather band on the dial, compared to I was only able to receive 5 High VHF channels in the analog days (CH 7, CH 9, and CH 11 from Chicago acceptable in color and CH 12 and CH 13 from Rockford, IL and Milwaukee, WI only in black & white).
I'm not sure how I'm hearing AM modulated TV data tones when the TV radio was only designed to receive FM audio.
Perhaps there is a phenomenon for receiving AM modulation on an FM receiver that I'm not familiar with.
So apparently there are 2 more channels squashed in there in digital than in analog with digital using every single channel instead of analog using every other channel.
but I thought all the VHF stations moved to UHF in the digital transistion. So maybe these stations on VHF I'm receiving are actually old UHF stations that have been moved to High VHF to save room for the big 3 networks (ABC, NBC, CBS)on UHF.
It is true that I heard no tones on the low VHF band. So it appears that indeed the low VHF band has been vacated, but the high VHF band has not been vacated.
Wikipedia says that CBS 2 Chicago moved to High VHF CH 12, NBC 5 Chicago moved to UHF CH 29, CH 6 WKQX-LP is allowed to continue in analog for now (it acts as an FM alternative rock station), ABC 7 Chicago moved to UHF CH 44, WGN (Chicago) CH 9 moved to UHF CH 19, WTTW PBS (Chicago) CH 11 moved to UHF CH 47, Fox 32 Chicago moved to UHF CH 31, WCIU (Chicago) CH 26 moved to UHF CH 27, WYCC PBS (Chicago) CH 20 moved to UHF CH 21, WISN 12 ABC (Milwaukee, WI) moved to UHF CH 34, WREX 13 NBC (Rockford, IL) moved to UHF CH 53, Ion 38 (Chicago) moved to UHF CH 43, CW 50 (Detroit, MI) moved to UHF CH 14, WYIN PBS CH 56 (Gary, IN) moved to UHF CH 17, UniMas Univision CH 60 (Aurora, IL) moved to UHF CH 50, WJYS Jesus Your Savior CH 62 (Hammond, IN) moved to UHF CH 32, [CH 68 was not used in Chicago area], CH 74
Wikipedia says that previously UHF channels used to have to be spaced 6 apart so there was only channels 14, 20, 26, 32, 38, 44, 50, 56, 62, 68, 74, 80, 83 available for broadcast (all channels above 52 were sold to cell carriers in 2009 for the 700 MHZ band - CH 52 - CH 69 -, channels 70-83 were used as translators in North America, CH 83 was removed in the U.S. in 1983 for the 850 MHZ AMPS cellular band and later the 850 MHZ GSM cellular band, also CH 60 was used in Chicago area, and there is scheduled to be an auction of the 600 MHZ band - CH 35 - CH 51 - in mid 2015) because of the limitations of super-heterodyne receivers when TV was invented with all valves, but today with the more accurate tuning of phase locked loop receivers with ICs its no longer necessary. So that's why the "moved" VHF channels can use UHF channels not used for broadcasting before. Obviously after the 2015 auction the UHF channels would need to be spaced even tighter from 14 to 34, unless the independent stations and PBS stations moved to High VHF or even Low VHF.
Maybe the ultimate goal of the FCC with the 2015 auction is to only carry the big 3 networks and force you to pay for cable or sattelite to watch any other networks.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_American_television_frequencies
Hhm, so CH 12 (CBS 2 Chicago) is the only High VHF station in the Chicago area, so that makes no sense that I'm hearing 7 different stations beeping and buzzing on the High VHF dial of the TV radio.
Even more interesting that I'm hearing digital stations to the right and to the left of the weather band, when Wikipedia says the weather band from 164.400 MHZ to 164.550 MHZ is below channel 7 (174 MHZ - 180 MHZ).
Perhaps a possibility is that below the weather band the "digital stations" I'm hearing are actually digital public service transmissions in the public service and business VHF bands from 138 MHZ - 144 MHZ and 148 MHZ - 156 MHZ. This band uses narrow band FM, so an FM detector could detect it.
Perhaps another possibility is I'm hearing digital transmissions in either the maritime VHF band from 156 MHZ - 158 MHZ (which is also narrow band FM) or the railroad VHF band from 159.81 MHZ - 161.565 MHZ
An even stranger possibility is that I'm receiving digital transmissions from my friend's digital wireless guitar who is half a mile line-of-sight-away in the wireless musical instrument VHF bands from 160.6 MHZ - 162 MHZ and 174-216 MHZ (low power at exact frequencies only). The high VHF band is also 174-216 MHZ for CH 7 - CH 13.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Very_high_frequency
I am very confused.