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John Smith wrote:
"Better question might be, when a run of conductor just happens to be resonant / impedance matched at 60 Hz, why isn`t massive amounts of 60 Hz ELF being radiated?" The hot and neutral conductors are too close together to allow energy to stray too far. Certain antennas exhibit "power gain". Terman defines power gain as: "the ratio of power that must be radiated by the comparison (reference) antenna to develop a particular field strength in the direction of maximum radiation to the power that must be radiated by the directional antenna to obtain the same field strength in the same direction." The definition implies more power required by the less directional (reference) antenna to equal the signal produced by the directional antenna which is said to have the "power gain" in a certain direction. The constant is the power fed to both antennas, gain and reference. The gain antenna is sending more of its power towards the target and not wasting so much in undesired directions. If it wasted power like the less directional antenna, it would eat more power in total to have a power gain ? on its target. In fact, the directional antenna is just making more effective use of the energy it receives, not sending out opposing streams of coincident energy. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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