Jim Lux wrote:
Cecil Moore wrote:
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/Xplore/lo...number=1610336
If you are a member of IEEE, you can access this paper:
Multiband behavior of wideband Sierpinski fractal bow-tie antenna
Yamini, A.H.; Soleimani, M.
Microwave Conference, 2005 European
Volume 3, Issue , 4-6 Oct. 2005 Page(s): 4 pp. -
Digital Object Identifier 10.1109/EUMC.2005.1610336
interesting paper..
The big benefit (from a cursory reading).. is that you have a more
consistent antenna pattern over the frequency range, which the vanilla
bowtie does not. And a somewhat wider match bandwidth. (mostly extending
it to higher frequencies)
There is apparently a "big benefit" for some applications
contrary to the nay-sayers on this newsgroup. Apparently,
the self-symmetry of fractals leads to some predictability
as far as wide-band response goes.
Nothing magic, though.
Don't remember anyone saying that fractals were magic. They
certainly obey Maxwell's laws. I suspect their advantages,
like their straight-wire cousins, lie in the predictability
of their mathematical models.
--
73, Cecil
http://www.w5dxp.com