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Old November 2nd 14, 10:36 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
rickman rickman is offline
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Default No antennae radiate all the power fed to them!

On 11/2/2014 6:06 AM, Lostgallifreyan wrote:
Jeff wrote in :

...or looking at it another way the dissipation in the radiation
resistance is not in the form of heat it is the power radiated into space.


Well, I did say I didn't know the terminology. On the other hand, I'm not
talking about antenna's radiation resistance. The only thing I'm sure of here
is that some body, at some temperature, can not emit heat faster than some
rate, and that superconductors in space will warm up too fast to stay
superconducting without support to cool them.


What is going to warm them up? The point of using them for the antenna
is because they have no resistance which means the signal is not turned
into heat.

This discussion looked like it had strayed some way from the earlier talk of
antennas and radiation resistance.


No, the topic was antenna radiating all the power fed to them. The
other two things that happen to the power is to be reflected back to the
source or dissipated as heat. Superconductors eliminate the heat
dissipation.

--

Rick