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On Mar 31, 8:52 pm, Jim Lux wrote:
wrote: Uhhh. actually there ARE laws of physics putting some pretty severe constraints on it, if not actually forbidding it, if you also accept the constraint that the material of which you make the antenna has finite resistance. Where ease might be defined in terms of being able to be made of actually realizable materials? The term 'actually realizable materials' seems to shift it's definition every time something new is discovered ![]() Chu and, later, Harrington said nothing about bandwidth, by the way. They were more concerned with directivity and size and stored energy (the latter of which ties to efficiency and bandwidth). True, I didn't imply that. Also, even if you created a very small antenna with high efficiency (e.g. with superconductors), the fields around such an antenna will be quite intense, so while the antenna may be small, its near field will be pretty much the same size as the dipole it replaces, so you'll need to put that tiny antenna way up in the air with a non-conductive, non-lossy support to get it away from everything else. Finding a feedline might be a bit of a challenge. One has to be careful when one draws "the boundary" of the antenna. Ok, it was my mistake to not clarify 'high efficiency'. By that I meant 'at the same order of efficiency as normal scale designs'. I am currenty interested by what I have seen claimed as 'compacted antennas', which behave similar to normal ones, except their dimensions are smaller, X-axis wise at least. That those designs do not perform as well or better than their counterparts is no problem to me, as long as the figures are in the same ballpark. That would mean they still are more efficient than previous designs which attempted to solve the problem of physical dimensions, which is an advancement in my book. That some other unexpected features as the broadband factor may appear is only a bonus, because we can achieve that with full scale antennas too. To be more specific, I was reffering to such designs that reduce the scale of antennas in at least one axis: http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2004ITAP...52.1945P http://ctd.grc.nasa.gov/organization...i-antennas.htm http://ntrs.nasa.gov/details.jsp?R=362773 http://ntrs.nasa.gov/details.jsp?R=470415 I have seen some of them described as fractal trees, but the information is relatively scarce. I know research is continuing on this subject and even found some info at a website somewhere but I can't remember where. Since you probably know more about them than me, I would appreciate some guidance here too ![]() In practical terms, the size of an antenna isn't just the dimensions of the metal, but the "keepout" area within which you can't tolerate any intrusions and still keep the same antenna performance (i.e. a 40m dipole laying on the ground doesn't work nearly as well as a dipole suspended 10 feet off the ground) For that matter, avoiding the breakdown of air might be a problem. Consider a tesla coil, which is basically a fairly inefficient (in terms of radiated power for RF input power) small antenna for 100 kHz or so. The limit on performance for the tesla coil isn't thermal heating of the coil, but HV breakdown. Even a few hundred watts into a "shoebox" sized coil will have breakdown problems (and this is fully predicted by Chu's analysis... it's that "energy stored in the field" problem) I do not dispute that, however I get a feeling we're talking about different things. Best, Robert |
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