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"Denny" wrote
When Terman did his work what were considered to be "the broadcast frequencies"? 540 kHz to 1,600 kHz. Another issue in Termans work is his decision to characterize the F layer as a reflecting mirror... Sorry, that's a misunderstanding. He states using the E layer in his Fig 55 and in his text. ... I can suggest that too low of a launch angle of the main wave is deleterious for HF DX in that such a shallow angle of incidence against the lower boundary of the F layer allows only reflection and does not allow the wave front to enter the ducting region higher up, which limits you to less than 1000 miles first hop. On page 749 of this chapter, Terman writes, "If it assumed that 3-1/2 degrees is the minimum practical angle above the horizon at which rays can depart from the transmitting antenna, the maximum skip distance theoretically possible is about 1,700 km for E-layer transmission and 3,000 to 3,500 km for F2-layer transmission. When communication is to be carried on over longer distances the transmission path must include two or more hops..." But if the vertical monopole has an unobstructed path for rays between the optical horizon and +3-1/2 degrees elevation, then those ranges for a single hop would increase. And the reason that 3-1/2 degrees might be a practical limit is not related to the belief that a ground-mounted vertical monopole has no radiation in that sector. In fact its relative field in that sector for all practical purposes is the same as it is in the horizontal plane, where it equals 100%. The link below leads to another of Terman's graphs, this time showing the measured fields vs distance out to about 2600 miles with MW freqs between 640 kHz and 1190 kHz . About these curves Terman writes," At great distances from the transmitter the skywave intensity drops off more rapidly than inversely with distance (see Fig 56) presumably because the reflection coefficient becomes less when the angle of incidence of the skywave approaches glancing, and also because at at considerable distances the skywave may have made two or three round trips between the ionosphere and the earth before reaching the receiving point." http://i62.photobucket.com/albums/h8...ermanFig56.jpg RF Whereas a steeper launch angle results in the wave front penetrating the bottom of the F layer, being refracted to a shallower angle once inside the ducting region, being ducted long distances with far less absorption than it would for multiple hops, and then again refracting and exiting the duct at a steeper angle than one would expect for such a distance... This to my mind is a common mechanism for those amazingly strong DX openings we see... denny / k8do |
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