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Old March 7th 15, 08:53 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Spike[_3_] Spike[_3_] is offline
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Default E/M radiation from a short vertical aerial

On 07/03/15 01:49, wrote:
In rec.radio.amateur.antenna Spike wrote:


Imagine a short rod vertical aerial not connected to ground, for the
(say) 160/80/60/40m bands, as might be found in a typical /M set-up, fed
with RF energy and operating over ground of average conductivity.


Three different waves will be launched from this: the sky wave, the
space wave (including the reflected ray), and the surface wave. Each of
these have their own characteristics, inasmuch as the sky wave is
launched willy-nilly even if the band isn't open for that mode, the
space wave depends on the path to the receiver, and the surface wave
depends on the electromagnetic characteristics of the air and the
surface material, although to some extent the latter affects all the
waves generated.


These "waves" are actually called skywave and surface wave and are
a propagation phenomena.


See:


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skywave
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface_wave
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line-of-sight_propagation


for how signals propagate.


Thanks to you and Jerry Stuckle for your replies.

Since a vertical aerial that I described initially emits all three of
these waves, I was interested in the relative amounts of the RF power
supplied to the antenna that goes into each. For example, does the sky
wave component take 90% of the power, leaving 10% for the space and
surface waves? What phenomena control this?


--
Spike

"Hard cases, it has frequently been observed, are apt to introduce bad
law". Judge Rolfe