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Old June 2nd 10, 09:28 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Roy Lewallen Roy Lewallen is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jun 2006
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Default What to use for an underground transponder?

Baron wrote:

Radio propagation through the earth is one of the most challenging
problems you could attempt to solve. You seem to be concentrating on
very low frequencies, fine if you can tolerate very very slow data
flows. I'm sure there are frequencies that will propagate through the
earth fairly easily, but getting to a point where a usable signal
occurs with reliable results isn't easy.
. . .


Attenuation through the ground depends on the soil conductivity and
dielectric constant, and the frequency. Here's the attenuation in dB/ft
for two ground types and a number of frequencies:

Freq MHz Avg soil(1) Vy good soil(2)
0.01 0.037 0.091
0.1 0.12 0.29
1 0.35 0.90
10 0.66 2.4
100 0.69 3.3
10,000 0.69 3.4

(1) Conductivity = 0.005 S/m, dielectric constant = 13
(2) Conductivity = 0.03 S/m, dielectric constant = 20

So the distance you can communicate depends on these factors as well as
antenna efficiency, power, and receiver sensitivity.

Attenuation in salt water is very much higher, which is why submerged
submarines have to communicate at VLF.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL