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#1
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I have searched quite a bit for evidence that states that performance
of antennas can be rated by it's size. Formulas do not refere to radiator size or volume and aparture is referenced to gain. I understand that sort of thinking based on Yagi design but the idea that all small radiators are inefficient is rather ludicrouse. My work, based on the sciences of the masters, show that a efficient radiator can be any size,shape and configuration as long as it is in equilibrium . Period No where can I find reference to "size" in what the masters state Regards Art |
#2
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#3
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On Mar 7, 11:46 am, Jim Lux wrote:
wrote: I have searched quite a bit for evidence that states that performance of antennas can be rated by it's size. Formulas do not refere to radiator size or volume and aparture is referenced to gain. I understand that sort of thinking based on Yagi design but the idea that all small radiators are inefficient is rather ludicrouse. My work, based on the sciences of the masters, show that a efficient radiator can be any size,shape and configuration as long as it is in equilibrium . Period No where can I find reference to "size" in what the masters state Regards Art The work by Chu (Journal of Applied Physics, p1163, v19, Dec 1948) and subsequently by Harrington (IEEE Trans Ant & Prop, V18#6, Nov 1965, p896) , Thiele (IEEE Trans on Ant and Prop, v51, #6, June 2003, p1263) and later others, discusses fundamental limits on performance. Watch out, though, for the assumptions in the constraints (e.g. whether the device attached to the feedpoint is reciprocal), and, of course, where the boundary of the system is. Watch out also for the definition of "Q", which in this context is the ratio of stored to disspated/radiated energy, not the ratio of center frequency/bandwidth. In short, there is a tradeoff between Q, directivity, and size. And, because high Q implies high stored energy, for physically realizable antennas with loss, efficiency is in the mix too. Googling "chu harrington limit" often turns up useful stuff. Googled Chu harrington and find that his work is basically empirical around known arrangements. When he brought the question of Q into the picture he made the statement that small antennas are usually of a low impedance which is correct empirically with respect to existing designs but it is not exclusive when dealing with all radiators that can be made that comply with Maxwells laws. As I have said before it is implicite in Maxwells laws that a efficient radiator can be any size shape or configuration as long as it complies with Maxwells law. In my case my small antenna can have any impedance value for equilibrium and it is quite easy to have a resistive impedance in the hundreds of ohms as well as minuit impedances. I conform to 50 ohms purely because of component availability. As another aside my small antennas have a much wider bandwidth than any other available! As far as gain or energy transmitted that all depends on what frequencies get thru the bandpass filter and in no way directs out of pass energy to be be redirected to band pass status and augment energy transmitted. Stored energy has no relationship to Q in my mind since it goes around or circulates as with a tank circuit energy that lies within the pass bandof the tank circuit filter. To summate, my antenna design is considered small yet complies with Maxwells laws and yet does not have a narrow bandwidth or low impedance thus Chu's comments cannot be inclusive of all radiators. Best regards Art |
#4
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On Mar 7, 7:29 pm, Art Unwin wrote:
When he brought the question of Q into the picture he made the statement that small antennas are usually of a low impedance which is correct empirically with respect to existing designs but it is not exclusive when dealing with all radiators that can be made that comply with Maxwells laws. I take it your version is gifted and suffers not from a low Q... :/ As I have said before it is implicite in Maxwells laws that a efficient radiator can be any size shape or configuration as long as it complies with Maxwells law. Sure it can. Common knowledge. It's also common knowledge that the trick with building a small efficient antenna is not really the size of the radiator itself, it's actually getting power to that small radiator. In my case my small antenna can have any impedance value for equilibrium and it is quite easy to have a resistive impedance in the hundreds of ohms as well as minuit impedances. I conform to 50 ohms purely because of component availability. As another aside my small antennas have a much wider bandwidth than any other available! As previously noted, you have reinvented the air cooled dummy load. Your performance specs sure seem to mimic one anyway.. :/ As far as gain or energy transmitted that all depends on what frequencies get thru the bandpass filter and in no way directs out of pass energy to be be redirected to band pass status and augment energy transmitted. Stored energy has no relationship to Q in my mind since it goes around or circulates as with a tank circuit energy that lies within the pass bandof the tank circuit filter. To summate, my antenna design is considered small yet complies with Maxwells laws and yet does not have a narrow bandwidth or low impedance thus Chu's comments cannot be inclusive of all radiators. Best regards Art As far as the rest, my cat has mittens.. :/ BTW, you need to define "equilibrium". After several months you still are lagging at this task. MK |
#5
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Art Unwin wrote:
On Mar 7, 11:46 am, Jim Lux wrote: wrote: I have searched quite a bit for evidence that states that performance of antennas can be rated by it's size. Formulas do not refere to radiator size or volume and aparture is referenced to gain. I understand that sort of thinking based on Yagi design but the idea that all small radiators are inefficient is rather ludicrouse. My work, based on the sciences of the masters, show that a efficient radiator can be any size,shape and configuration as long as it is in equilibrium . Period No where can I find reference to "size" in what the masters state Regards Art The work by Chu (Journal of Applied Physics, p1163, v19, Dec 1948) and subsequently by Harrington (IEEE Trans Ant & Prop, V18#6, Nov 1965, p896) , Thiele (IEEE Trans on Ant and Prop, v51, #6, June 2003, p1263) and later others, discusses fundamental limits on performance. Watch out, though, for the assumptions in the constraints (e.g. whether the device attached to the feedpoint is reciprocal), and, of course, where the boundary of the system is. Watch out also for the definition of "Q", which in this context is the ratio of stored to disspated/radiated energy, not the ratio of center frequency/bandwidth. In short, there is a tradeoff between Q, directivity, and size. And, because high Q implies high stored energy, for physically realizable antennas with loss, efficiency is in the mix too. Googling "chu harrington limit" often turns up useful stuff. Googled Chu harrington and find that his work is basically empirical around known arrangements. When he brought the question of Q into the picture he made the statement that small antennas are usually of a low impedance which is correct empirically with respect to existing designs but it is not exclusive To summate, my antenna design is considered small yet complies with Maxwells laws and yet does not have a narrow bandwidth or low impedance thus Chu's comments cannot be inclusive of all radiators. Best regards Art which is why I mentioned: "Watch out, though, for the assumptions in the constraints" However, I believe it is incorrect to characterize his analysis as empiricism (i.e. getting experimental data and fitting curves). His analysis (and that of Harrington and Thiele) is entirely theoretical, and actually doesn't deal with loss in the antenna, per se. Indeed, Chu's analysis is based on a simple case (a dipole), but that's more because it's a good first example (and he could use the previous work of Schelkunoff as a starting point). I believe the analysis is generally valid, regardless of what the actual antenna is. |
#6
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On Mar 10, 11:19 am, Jim Lux wrote:
Art Unwin wrote: On Mar 7, 11:46 am, Jim Lux wrote: wrote: I have searched quite a bit for evidence that states that performance of antennas can be rated by it's size. Formulas do not refere to radiator size or volume and aparture is referenced to gain. I understand that sort of thinking based on Yagi design but the idea that all small radiators are inefficient is rather ludicrouse. My work, based on the sciences of the masters, show that a efficient radiator can be any size,shape and configuration as long as it is in equilibrium . Period No where can I find reference to "size" in what the masters state Regards Art The work by Chu (Journal of Applied Physics, p1163, v19, Dec 1948) and subsequently by Harrington (IEEE Trans Ant & Prop, V18#6, Nov 1965, p896) , Thiele (IEEE Trans on Ant and Prop, v51, #6, June 2003, p1263) and later others, discusses fundamental limits on performance. Watch out, though, for the assumptions in the constraints (e.g. whether the device attached to the feedpoint is reciprocal), and, of course, where the boundary of the system is. Watch out also for the definition of "Q", which in this context is the ratio of stored to disspated/radiated energy, not the ratio of center frequency/bandwidth. In short, there is a tradeoff between Q, directivity, and size. And, because high Q implies high stored energy, for physically realizable antennas with loss, efficiency is in the mix too. Googling "chu harrington limit" often turns up useful stuff. Googled Chu harrington and find that his work is basically empirical around known arrangements. When he brought the question of Q into the picture he made the statement that small antennas are usually of a low impedance which is correct empirically with respect to existing designs but it is not exclusive To summate, my antenna design is considered small yet complies with Maxwells laws and yet does not have a narrow bandwidth or low impedance thus Chu's comments cannot be inclusive of all radiators. Best regards Art which is why I mentioned: "Watch out, though, for the assumptions in the constraints" However, I believe it is incorrect to characterize his analysis as empiricism (i.e. getting experimental data and fitting curves). His analysis (and that of Harrington and Thiele) is entirely theoretical, and actually doesn't deal with loss in the antenna, per se. Indeed, Chu's analysis is based on a simple case (a dipole), but that's more because it's a good first example (and he could use the previous work of Schelkunoff as a starting point). I believe the analysis is generally valid, regardless of what the actual antenna is. You may well be correct. I cannot enter the IEEE papers that you allude to to study it furthur. The fact that my impedences are high and the bandwith is large is really putting me in a unknown area and I have a lot to learn about it Regards Art |
#7
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You can pretty much sum up the characteristics of small antennas as:
Small - Broadband - Efficient: Pick any two. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
#8
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On Mar 10, 1:56 pm, Roy Lewallen wrote:
You can pretty much sum up the characteristics of small antennas as: Small - Broadband - Efficient: Pick any two. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Who knows what "efficiency" represents in the electrical world? It is the word "small" that confuses everybody when the word should be" fractional wavelength". Small and large are meaningles in the antenna world. No I diddn't overlook the sniping. |
#9
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Art wrote:
"No where can I find reference to "size" in what the masters state" More diligence! Terman never failed to have an answer for me. On page 864 of his 1955 0pus he writes: "The simplest wire radiator or antenna is the elementary doublet shown in Fig. 23-1a. This consists of a conductor of length small-delta l that is short compared with the wavelength lambda, and which is assumed to have such large capacitance areas associated with each end that current flowing throughout the length of the doublet everywhere has the same value I. The strength E of the field radiated from such an elementary antenna in volts per unit length by a current I cos (omega t + 90 degrees) is given by the formula E = 60 pi/d l/lambda Icos theta cos omega (t-d/c) Eqn. (23-1) Here d is the distance from the doublet to a distant receiving point P, and theta is the direction of P with respect a plane perpendicular to the axis of the doublet while c is the velocity of light. The strength of the radiated field is distributed in space in accordance with the doughnut pattern with a figure-of-eight cross section shown in Fig. 23-1b." The above is only the beginning of Terman`s chapter on antennas. Fig. 23-2 shows how contributions from multiple doublets in a larger antenna combine to produce the pattern of the larger antenna. Point to be noted is that length over lambda is a multiplier in Eqn.(23-1). Obviously size (length) does make a difference. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#10
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On Mar 7, 2:08 pm, (Richard Harrison) wrote:
Art wrote: "No where can I find reference to "size" in what the masters state" More diligence! Terman never failed to have an answer for me. On page 864 of his 19550pus he writes: "The simplest wire radiator or antenna is the elementary doublet shown in Fig. 23-1a. This consists of a conductor of length small-delta l that is short compared with the wavelength lambda, and which is assumed to have such large capacitance areas associated with each end that current flowing throughout the length of the doublet everywhere has the same value I. The strength E of the field radiated from such an elementary antenna in volts per unit length by a current I cos (omega t + 90 degrees) is given by the formula E = 60 pi/d l/lambda Icos theta cos omega (t-d/c) Eqn. (23-1) Here d is the distance from the doublet to a distant receiving point P, and theta is the direction of P with respect a plane perpendicular to the axis of the doublet while c is the velocity of light. The strength of the radiated field is distributed in space in accordance with the doughnut pattern with a figure-of-eight cross section shown in Fig. 23-1b." The above is only the beginning of Terman`s chapter on antennas. Fig. 23-2 shows how contributions from multiple doublets in a larger antenna combine to produce the pattern of the larger antenna. Point to be noted is that length over lambda is a multiplier in Eqn.(23-1). Obviously size (length) does make a difference. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI I disagree. Laws written are all based on the assumption of equilibrium and that includes Maxwell's laws. These laws hav e zero refernce to size as such though many would seek for the word volume. Pertinent factors are wave length of frequency in use and root LC. For equilibrium there is zero reference to size or volume. I ofcourse fall back to the term equilibrium which is a basic for Gauss's law of statics to which a variable time can be added. Thus it can be seen that a law can be stated that a radiator can be any size, shape or configuration as long as it is in equilibrium. The problem here is that amateur radio is wellded to the yagi design which is not one of equilibrium and the fact that amateurs and many of the higher educated have pushed the term of equilibrium outside the box. This shows up when the uneducated refer to small antennas as being inefficient based purely on the connection to a specific design without regard to whether equilibrium exists so that all the laws of the masters can be applied. Again, it is implicite that all laws apply when there is equilibrium, if there is not then the laws do not apply as is. With respect to the term "length", this is not synonimous to "size" because it has only one degree of freedom. There is no reason why a radiator can be rolled up into any shape as long as the laws of Maxwell are adhered to and such a sample has been assigned for testing and I have to be satisfied with the results as they arrive.I will be soon using one on the radio for QSO's and I apologise if its use offends anybody Seems like the group is in quite a tizzy that a person would have a small radiator that defies that which has taken them years to memorize. I gave all pertinent details how to make them I also gave the mathematics and a sample where established computor programs confirm the above and now to upset all again I have given a sample for testing to a independent reviewer. There is no need for anybody to worry, Yagi designs still exist for those who abore change,worry about transmission line radiation or even radiators melting. When you all understand the relevence of equilibrium you can then procede to review the math, until then you are all in left field. Best regards Art There is nothing in Maxwells laws that prohibit a "wavelength" from being condensed into the size of a pinhead or smaller and still be "efficient" with respect to stated paramitors. |
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