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antenna physics question
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December 13th 10, 07:51 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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antenna physics question
Registered User wrote:
On Mon, 13 Dec 2010 18:02:55 -0000,
wrote:
Registered User wrote:
On Mon, 13 Dec 2010 00:13:10 -0000,
wrote:
Registered User wrote:
On Sun, 12 Dec 2010 17:32:53 -0000,
wrote:
Registered User wrote:
Efficiency is a measure so it must have one or more dimensions
Efficiency is a ratio usually expressed as a percentage and has no dimensions.
The efficiency of an antenna is the radiated power divided by the input
power.
There are two dimensions in the calculation, radiated power and input
power. Although the units of measure associated with the dimensional
data may cancel the dimensional metadata doesn't.
x power/ y power = x/y
The units cancel to form a dimensionles, unitless, ratio.
This is grade school math.
unitless yes and in the example given no metadata is provided. The
result of the calculation is just a meaningless number.
What of the equation :
x units of radiated power / y units of input power
The units cancel but the metadata doesn't. The result is a number that
describes the ratio of radiated power to input power.
2 watt / 10 watt = 0.2
No "metadata".
Yes no metadata beyond the UOM and when the UOMs cancel the result is
a bare number. Twenty percent of what?
Have you the slightest clue what the word "context" means?
"Antenna efficiency is 20%" has all the information required and if the
discussion is about antennas, "efficiency is 20%" has all the information
required.
--
Jim Pennino
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