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Wimpie wrote:
On 7 ene, 04:25, (Richard Harrison) wrote: art wrote: "You did not 'determine" radiated power.....period" Exactly right. Power in the near field is largely reactive. To determine radiated power you measure the in-phase volt-amperes with a wattmeter. The multimeter on the hood maximizes output same as a Bird wattmeter for practical results, but you hanen`t quantified watts out. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI Hi Richard, You can determine radiated power and radiation pattern by near field measurements (theoretically). Please search for "poynting theorem" and "Huygens principle", "Huygens Source" or "Fresnel diffraction theory". Most texts require differential vector calculus. This is what is done on a near-field antenna range. For certain scanning geometries, the math is fairly straightforward (e.g. Fourier transforms). For others, it gets complex, especially if the scanning points are not evenly spaced. A further complication is that you need to make 3 axis measurements of both E and H. Jim, W6RMK |
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