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I just ran a few analyses which are relevant to this discussion. They
were done with EZNEC/4 using an NEC-4 calculating engine (although NEC-2 will give the same results), using MININEC-type ground to simulate a lossless ground system, and with surface wave included. The antenna is a 0.25 wavelength high vertical. The intent was to look at the vertical pattern characteristics at various distances. Before discussing the results, let me point out that radiation very close to a vertical antenna is maximum at the horizon, as Rich has said. However, the field propagating in proximity with the ground (the surface wave) gets attenuated with distance much more rapidly than the normal attenuation of a wave in free space (or the sky wave, discussed shortly), which is attenuated only because it expands to cover an increasing area with increasing distance. At a distance beyond which the surface wave has decayed to a negligible value, the remaining field is known as the sky wave. This has the pattern characteristics you'll see with EZNEC (unless using EZNEC pro with ground wave enabled) or NEC without ground wave enabled. Because of ground reflection, the sky wave has zero amplitude at an elevation angle of zero except for perfectly conducting ground. For typical ground conditions and in the HF range, the maximum field strength occurs at an elevation angle on the order of 20 degrees. Remember, this is the sky wave, which is what's left beyond the distance at which the surface wave has been attenuated to essentially zero. The rate at which the surface wave is attenuated with distance is a function of ground conductivity, and a very strong function of frequency. That's why AM broadcasters successfully use surface wave propagation, while it's of little use to amateurs operating at HF and above. Rich's original posting showed how some of the surface wave from a broadcast station can (presumably) even reach far enough for the Earth's curvature to allow it to escape and reach the ionosphere for longer distance communication. As the following results will show, this doesn't happen at HF and above. Here are results of the analyses. The initial runs were at 1 MHz, which has been the focus of Rich's comments on this thread. The reported field strength includes the entire field, or in other words, the sum of the sky and surface waves. At 1 km, with either average or very poor soil, the elevation pattern shows a monotonic decrease as you go up in elevation, like in the plots referenced in earlier postings and resembling the plot of the pattern over perfect ground. Changing the ground type attenuates both the sky and surface waves (although not necessarily by the same amount), which tends to reduce the dependence of pattern shape on ground characteristics. So the same general pattern shape occurs with a range of soil types. However, the pattern shape is profoundly affected by both distance and frequency because both these determine the amount of surface wave attenuation. For example, with average ground at 10 km (rather than 1 km) from the antenna and 1 MHz, the field strength is relatively high at zero degrees elevation, and drops as the elevation angle increases, as it does at 1 km. But at about 2 degrees it hits a minimum and begins increasing again, reaching a maximum at about 20 degrees elevation, which is the angle of maximum sky wave. At that point, the field strength is about 1.24 times (about 1.9 dB greater than) the field strength at zero degrees elevation. This is because the surface wave is attenuated much more rapidly with distance than the sky wave, and at 10 km the surface wave has already decayed to less than the sky wave field strength. At 100 km, the ratio of sky to surface wave (that is, field strength at 20 degree elevation compared to zero degrees) is 13.6 dB, because of course the surface wave has decayed a great deal more. At 3 MHz, the attenuation of the surface wave is much more dramatic. Just 1 km from the antenna over average ground, the field strength *increases* monotonically (at least above 0.1 degree, which is the lowest I checked) as the elevation angle increases, until it reaches the sky wave peak at about 24 degrees. At that angle, the field strength is more than 40 dB greater than the strength at the horizon (which is the remaining surface wave). At 10 km, the field strength at 24 degrees is more than 60 dB stronger than that at the horizon. And of course, this effect becomes stronger with increasing frequency and distance. So even at 10 km distance from the antenna at 3 MHz over average ground, the sky wave is more than 60 dB stronger than the surface wave. The difference becomes greater at higher frequencies and greater distances. This is why the surface wave is of little practical interest to most amateurs. And it's why you'll never see the wonderful low-angle ionospheric propagation effects Rich predicted in his original posting on this thread. The EZNEC/4 results are just what we should expect, given a knowledge of how the surface wave and sky wave are attenuated with distance. I caution people to take care in extrapolating propagation or antenna performance results at AM broadcast frequencies to the higher frequencies more commonly used by amateurs. If done carelessly, it can lead you to reach some pretty seriously wrong conclusions. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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