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![]() "jawod" wrote in message ... Dave wrote: well, 'adaptive beamforming' is two words... 'beamforming' means forming a directional 'beam' using an antenna. be it a simple parasitic array like yagi's or a complex array of driven elements like a flat panel radar. most often when you talk about beamforming it is more like the radar arrays or other large array that combines signals from many small antennas to form a very directional beam. 'adaptive' means forming the beam in a way that makes it work better in the environment, or adapt to it's surroundings. this is often used to form beams to maximize a received signal while notching out interference. so you use an algorithm to measure s/n ratio or some other parameter and adjust power and phasing of the individual elements to get the best signal you can. its harder to adapt a transmitting antenna since you need some kind of feedback from the far end to let you know if the beam is getting better or worse as you adjust it. "john" wrote in message ... I came across a reference about adaptive beamforming in the ARRL Handbook. The reference was from QEX which I don't yet subscribe to. Anyone care to explain/discuss this neat concept? John AB8WH Dave, Thanks for responding. Given the need for "stealth" antennas, Is there /are there design(s) that create small footprint antennas that function as larger traditional ones? Can a longwire be divided into small segments that are independently controlled such that the sum of the parts behave differently than the whole?...and can this effect be altered via software? Has anyone been working on this approach? John AB8WH no, you can't make antennas smaller this way... you can make small parts behave differently, but you can't get more gain or efficiency than a simillarly sized 'normal' antenna. i don't know of any hams actively working in this area, mostly because on hf the antennas get huge quickly. and on vhf/uhf and up there are much simpler ways to get gain for single point to point use that most hams are interested in. the real applications for things like this are radar and multi-point fixed or mobile systems that have to deal with multipath reflection and interference. |