Calculation of received power in the far field
On 23 Jun, 13:34, (Richard Harrison) wrote:
George, K6GW wrote:
"What is the esiest/fastest way to calculate received power out of a
very short non-resonant antenna?"
Field strengths are given in volts per meter. This is related to power
by e squared / r.
The dissipationless resistance of free-space (a ratio between voltage
and current) is 377 ohms. Attenuation due only to reduction of power per
square meter as the radio wave envelope expands in space is 6 dB every
time distance from the transmitter doubles. That means getting only 1/4
the previous power every time distance from the transmitter doubles.
Volts per meter decline linearly with distance from the transmitter. At
10x the distance, the signal strength or volts per meter is 1/10 the
previous value. 1/10 the voltage is 1/100 of the power.
We have a participant in this newsgroup, Art Unwin, who disdains book
contents,
snip
Not so.
It is just that parrots are unreliable when quoting from books
Art
Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI
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