Thread: Corriolis force
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Old September 11th 09, 08:10 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Richard Fry Richard Fry is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jun 2006
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Default Corriolis force

On Sep 11, 1:45*pm, Szczepan Białek wrote:
The both antennas (transmitter and receiver) should be aligned. You wrote:
"Most compact, and inexpensive MW AM broadcast receivers use an integrated,
ferrite core "loopstick" receive antenna.

When such receivers are oriented with their control legends and
displays aligned in the horizontal plane, as when the bottom/back of
the receiver is sitting on a table, "


S* then wrote:

It means that the waves are horizontaly polarized.


Not so. The receive antenna I described responds to the magnetic
field, not the electric field. In an EM wave these two fields are at
right angles to each other, and to the direction of travel.

The polarisation of a wave is given by the physical orientation of its
electric field. If that field is vertically polarised then the
receive antenna I described will receive maximum (magnetic) field, and
my experiment will prove that the incoming EM wave is vertically
polarised.

One mast is omnidirectional. The two are directional like a horizontal
dipole.


However a horizontal dipole radiates horizontally polarised waves. A
directional MW array radiates vertically polarized waves, regardless
of the shape of its azimuth pattern.

RF