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#11
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Richard:
[snip] "Richard Clark" wrote in message ... On Sat, 06 Dec 2008 18:46:16 GMT, "Dave" wrote the lamentations of a weak mind struggling with the high concepts of an infinitely Byzantine theory from the laboratories of Ærthur: on the contrary, i believe antenna programs and understand how they work, at one time i wrote one of my own that did well on designing phased vertical arrays... and not a single reference to the weak force in it at all! .. .. .. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC [snip] Hmmmm you guys are just to sceptical of poor Art's "different" biases. The one eyed man in the land of the blind, indeed. Have ya'll considered that Art may not be fully occupying our own four-space and may in fact be operating in several of modern string theory's higher dimensions. After all, modern we now know as explained by John Moffat [1], that from the view of modern Physicists unfettered by actual observation and experiment that there may be at least 11 of those dimensions available to someone of Art's calibre and that perhaps... just perhaps, we "flatladers" may not even be able to comprehend Art's machinations from our own puny four space viewpoint. All that said... we've got to get around to viewing emag fields from the viewpoint of circular components. The universe may well be better understood when viewed by circular polarization rather than by rectilinear polarization. No? [1] John W. Moffat, "Reinventing Gravity", HarperCollins Publishers, New York, 2008. ISBN: 978-0-06-117088-1. May be found at LC under LCC QC178.M64 2008. Cheers! -- Pete K1PO -- Indialantic By-the-Sea, FL |
#12
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On Sat, 6 Dec 2008 17:10:39 -0500, "Peter O. Brackett"
wrote: "Reinventing Gravity", I prefer the original over ersatz. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#13
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Peter O. Brackett wrote:
. . . By "mixed" polarization, I assume you mean a single polarization which is neither horizontal nor vertical and can be described as a "mixture" of a purely horizontal and a purely vertical wave. [snip] No. What I meant by "mixed" was that, just as with daylight for example, the field contains many polarization orientations. In fact usually outside in daylight most of the light we see with our eyes contains very nearly an equal distribution of all polariztions. An exception in the sky's light is perpedicular to the suns rays where because of upper atmospheric conditions light becomes slightly polarized. It is claimed that some people can actually "see" this polarized light differently than normal light. (Haider's Brush) Of course many people know that reflected light, for example from the surface of a lake, becomes highly polarized. This is the reason that "Polaroid" sunglasses are used by sportsmen and others to reduce perceived glare from reflective surfaces. That said, mixed polarization, is also largely the case of HF waves received over ionospheric paths. In other words HF waves received over long distances will contain a wide distribution of linear and perhaps circular polarizations. Thus rendering the use of single polarized antennas relatively useless at HF by amateurs. Unless of course one is prepared to pay the significant price in space and equipment to implement a polarization diversity receiving system. There is only one E field associated with a wave and, if linearly polarized, it has only one orientation or polarization. It's not like incoherent light, but akin to a laser. There is no "mixture" of polarizations in an EM wave. . . . True for a single antenna and receiver, which is the usual case for a ham, see my remarks above. However if one is willing to pay the price for several antennas and synchronous receiving systems then receiving gains can often be obtained by the exploitation of polarization diversity. Actually, you don't want synchronous receivers, or else you get a single effective polarization just as though the antennas were combined into a phased array. For spacial or polarization diversity, you need intentionally non-coherent receivers. [snip] Interesting. Can you work an example for us? I'm curious as to what you use for theta in the "law's" equation. [snip] Theta is just the relative orientation of the polarization of the transmitting and receiving antennas, or in the case of an optical polarimeter, the relative orientations of the polarizing and analyzing polarizer. Theta is commonly illustrated in undergraduate optical laboratories and science experiment kits, using a couple of pieces of "Polaroid" film with the polarization angle marked on the film by a notch or other marking. When the two films are aligned with their polariztion direction perpendicular there is no light propagation, i.e. theta is 90 degrees, and when they are aligned with theta equal to zero then light is propagated. In the case of dipole antennas, theta is zero when two antennas are co-linear and theta is 90 degrees when the antennas are perpendicular. So in your equation, what are theta for RHP and LHP, since you've said that the equation applies to circular polarization? . . . [snip] angular velocity of rotation is one revolution per cycle of the RF carrier, or in other words one radian of circular rotation for each radian of frequency transmitted. In other words most well known CP antennas produce ONLY synchronous CP, where the angular velocity of rotation of the E vector is synchronized exactly with the frequency of the wave being transmitted. That is, in fact, the definition of circular or elliptical polarization. [snip] Agreed, both you and I and thousands of others know that. [smile] Then why are you calling your non-synchronous system "circular polarization"? Definition! Gosh where is Cecil when you need him? The only problem with definitions is that there are so many of them! --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "When I use a word, Humpty Dumpty said in a rather scornful tone, "It means just what I chose it to mean - neither more nor less." "The question is," said Alice, "whether you can make words mean so many different things." "The question is," said Humpty Dumpty, "which is to be Master - that's all." -- Lewis Caroll, from Through the Looking Glass -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- [grin] That's a great attitude for a politician, philosopher, or biblical scholar. But engineers and scientists depend on universally understood technical terms in order to communicate. I'm free to say that my car gets a gas mileage of 30 miles/hour and weighs 420 miles. But it wouldn't be a smart thing to do if I intend to convey information. [snip] Sorry, it doesn't. An unavoidable side effect of the synchronicity change is that the amplitude of the E field still changes at a 1 GHz rate, going through a complete cycle from max to zero to max to zero to max each nanosecond. A circularly polarized wave doesn't change amplitude with time. A non-circular elliptical wave changes amplitude but not fully to zero each cycle. [snip] Here there is a bit of fuzziness... I agree that the E field of a wave is always changing at the RF carrier frequency since it is an AC waveform. Alternating current is always changing! And so a 1 GHz carrier will always have an E field that oscillates back and forth at the carrier (center?) frequency when analyzed by a (linear) polarimeter. I disagree with you that a circular polarized wave has a constant E field. Even in the case of a purely circularly polarized the E field still oscillates at the carrier (center?) frequency when analyzed by a linear polarizer. i.e. if a purely CP wave is received on a linear polarized antenna the detected E field (Volts per meter) will be observed to be oscillating at the carrier frequency. However if received on a purely CP responding antenna this oscillating E fileld will appear to be constant. The E field vector can be considered to be similar to the image of a spoke on a rolling wheel. The radius of the spoke is constant, but it's projection on the ground over which the wheel is rolling will always be oscillating in length. When you receive a circularly polarized wave on a linearly polarized antenna, you're seeing only the component of the wave that's linearly polarized in the orientation of the antenna. This is exactly the same process as filtering a complex waveform. You've removed part of the field and are observing what's left after the filtering process, then drawing conclusions about the original waveform based on those observations, much like listening to a concert orchestra through a long pipe and deciding that orchestral sound is very ringy and limited in tonal range. It would benefit you to gain a bit of education about circularly polarized waves. You'll find that a circularly polarized wave can be created from (or broken into) two linearly polarized waves oriented at right angles and in phase quadrature. So each of the components has a time-varying amplitude, but the sum, which is the circularly polarized wave, has a constant amplitude but time-varying orientation. Your linear antenna filters out one of the components, leaving you to observe only the other. [snip] Circularly polarized waves have many characteristics and particular relationships to linearly polarized waves. The waves you're producing don't have some of these characteristics, like the constant amplitude. Your method doesn't produce circularly polarized waves even though the polarization does indeed change with time. [snip] I beg to disagree. The waves that I am describing are exactly the same. Consider if the mechanical motor that spins my linear antenna spins at exactly the carrier frequency. There would be then no way to tell the difference between the two. That's right, in that case you would be producing circularly polarized waves. But only with a synchronous spin speed. As soon as you separate the rotational speed from the wave's oscillation, you have something else with different characteristics, e.g., a time varying amplitude. [snip] Because a circularly polarized antenna responds equally well to all orientations of linear polarization, the normal helix wouldn't be aware of the polarization rotation -- unless the polarization rotation was fast enough to be nearly synchronous. [snip] Heh, heh... what would you consider to be "fast enough"? Would the rate of spin have to be 99-44/100 percent of the synchronous frequency? Or would it have to be closer than that? At what magic spin frequency would the two be indistinguisable. FWIW... I can propose a scheme that will electronically rotate the linear antenna at any desired frequency, at least up to the accuracy of modern atomic clock standards. What you'll end up with is amplitude modulation with the modulating frequency being the beat note between your spinning speed and the wave frequency. This creates sidebands. You'll see this when the sidebands are within the bandwidth of the helix. Outside that, the helix will filter off the sidebands and you'll just see the "carrier" -- the original wave with no modulation. [snip] Sorry, I didn't find it "mind-blowing". [snip] Roy, I don't belive you have thought about it hard enough yet, for clearly this idea has already "blown" your mind! If you say so. For did you not state above that a circular carrier wave has a constant amplitude? Yes, I did. Circularly polarized, that is. A radio wave with constant aplitude, indeed! Something must be blown! At zero frequency, how would a constant wave propagate? Here's a really neat little trick you might want to add to your bag -- superposition. As I mentioned, you can create a circularly polarized wave from two linearly polarized waves. The linearly polarized waves are of course normally time-varying. As long as the propagation medium is linear (such as air), superposition says you can split the circularly polarized wave apart into two linearly polarized waves, study and analyze how they propagate, then add the two components back together again after the propagation. This is, incidentally, a very simple way to see what happens when a circularly polarized wave reflects from a surface -- analyze the linear components separately and add the results. This assumption/view that zero frequency wave can propagate is akin to Cecil's view that there are no reflections at DC. No, it isn't. I don't mean to be facitious and I am quite serious about all of this. Just because no one has ever considered non-synchronous circular polariztion before does not mean that it doesn't exist, or that it may not be useful. Me? I have already thought of several potential uses for non-synchronous circular polarization. How about polariztion frequency modulation? Or... how about polariztion phase modulation? Or... Got you thinking yet? Sorry, I don't recall having stopped thinking. If I have, this isn't the way to get me started. Thanks again for your clearly interesting comments and feedback. More thoughts, comments? -- Pete K1PO -- Indialantic By-the-Sea, FL That's about all I can do at this end. I can't make you actually pick up a text and learn about circularly polarized waves, and until you do, you'll have some fundamental misconceptions about them. Guess I'm one of those folks who someone described recently as "having the common sense educated out of me". It's served me well, since it's enabled me able to spend a career designing a wide variety of state of the art electronic circuits and antennas, successfully mass produced, which work as designed. But I know it's not for everyone. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
#14
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On Dec 6, 12:46*pm, "Dave" wrote:
"Art Unwin" wrote in message ... You can have diversity with respect to all polarizations except circular where you only have the choice of one. why can't you do lhcp and rhcp diversity? If you believe that antenna programs are utter idiocy then that will be inline with your general attitude. I am sure that some have taken up my suggestion to check for themselves instead of resorting to knee jerk reactions with out foundation. on the contrary, i believe antenna programs and understand how they work, at one time i wrote one of my own that did well on designing phased vertical arrays... and not a single reference to the weak force in it at all! *nor will you find any of the existing antenna modeling programs that use the weak force. *which kind of contradicts your whole rant, you say you believe in the modeling programs and that they give results that agree with your corrupted weak force model, and yet they don't use the weak force at all.... never have, and never will. *nor can you state where the weak force is included in Maxwell's equations, which of course all the modeling programs are based on. *so that just leaves you hanging by your magical equilibrium levitating diamagnetic neutrinos... which you still haven't explained how they work with my ferromagnetic radiators. I explained ferro magnetism and antennas a long time ago where the weak force becomes swamped You should be able to come to your own conclusions when evatuating the effect on the Tank Circuit With respect to the weak force action it was that addition to Maxwells laws that provided equilibrium. Kraus gave an example of it when he empirically created pitch angle with respect to other parameters without a full understanding of what created it. In this Universe there is no such thing as a straight line tho a helicoptor can simulate it with two rotors at right angles to create equilibrium the same as a gyroscope or a Sedgeman. The Universe is contained within an arbitrary border in equilibrium, you can't get away from that. The pitch angle that Kraus uses is a creation of the weak force which thus forbids parallelism in antenna arrays. If your antenna that you are bragging about contains parallelism between elements and or the ground surface then you are NOT obtaining maximum radiation but in fact you are increasing your losses. You really have a long way to go with respect to antennas and the answers you search for are not to be found in Snakesphere that is muddied to prevent understanding. As far as antenna programs not using the weak force, that is stupid as it is what is termed as the "displacement" current a guess arrived at based on the units required But rarely do hams use computer programs as initially designed around Maxwell but instead use a modification of such in following Yagi and Uda planar design which is an aproximation. All you have to do is to provide a one liner to a optimiser to realise you are stating a load of crap and have reached a point where you cannot handle the truth as it reveals exactly who and what you are. Some day a knoweledgable person will arrive on this group and ram a computer sample down your throat and expose you and the others as just talking heads. Most of you are like a high school student who wondered into a post graduate lecture room where all appeared as a torrent of babble until the time you grew up, if you ever did. Have a great week end Art |
#15
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Roy:
[snip] That's a great attitude for a politician, philosopher, or biblical scholar. But engineers and scientists depend on universally understood technical terms in order to communicate. I'm free to say that my car gets a gas mileage of 30 miles/hour and weighs 420 miles. But it wouldn't be a smart thing to do if I intend to convey information. [snip] Sorry, it doesn't. An unavoidable side effect of the synchronicity change is that the amplitude of the E field still changes at a 1 GHz rate, going through a complete cycle from max to zero to max to zero to max each nanosecond. A circularly polarized wave doesn't change amplitude with time. A non-circular elliptical wave changes amplitude but not fully to zero each cycle. [snip] Here there is a bit of fuzziness... I agree that the E field of a wave is always changing at the RF carrier frequency since it is an AC waveform. Alternating current is always changing! And so a 1 GHz carrier will always have an E field that oscillates back and forth at the carrier (center?) frequency when analyzed by a (linear) polarimeter. I disagree with you that a circular polarized wave has a constant E field. Even in the case of a purely circularly polarized the E field still oscillates at the carrier (center?) frequency when analyzed by a linear polarizer. i.e. if a purely CP wave is received on a linear polarized antenna the detected E field (Volts per meter) will be observed to be oscillating at the carrier frequency. However if received on a purely CP responding antenna this oscillating E fileld will appear to be constant. The E field vector can be considered to be similar to the image of a spoke on a rolling wheel. The radius of the spoke is constant, but it's projection on the ground over which the wheel is rolling will always be oscillating in length. When you receive a circularly polarized wave on a linearly polarized antenna, you're seeing only the component of the wave that's linearly polarized in the orientation of the antenna. This is exactly the same process as filtering a complex waveform. You've removed part of the field and are observing what's left after the filtering process, then drawing conclusions about the original waveform based on those observations, much like listening to a concert orchestra through a long pipe and deciding that orchestral sound is very ringy and limited in tonal range. It would benefit you to gain a bit of education about circularly polarized waves. You'll find that a circularly polarized wave can be created from (or broken into) two linearly polarized waves oriented at right angles and in phase quadrature. So each of the components has a time-varying amplitude, but the sum, which is the circularly polarized wave, has a constant amplitude but time-varying orientation. Your linear antenna filters out one of the components, leaving you to observe only the other. [snip] Yes indeed, we must be talking at cross purposes, since we seem to have no disagreement on any of the above. I don't see where we differ at all! [snip] Would the rate of spin have to be 99-44/100 percent of the synchronous frequency? Or would it have to be closer than that? At what magic spin frequency would the two be indistinguisable. [snip] I would repeat the above question in a slightly different way... How much frequency, or for that matter phase, difference must there be between the mechanical spin frequency and the carrier frequency before you could tell the difference between your "conventionally defined" circular polarization and my definition? If my antenna was spining with an angular velocity within say, 0.000000000005% of the carrier frequency, would that do it? Or perhaps my spin rate would have to be closer to the carrier frequency than that? If so, then how close does it have to be to qualify to be called circular polarization under (your) traditional/conventional definition? [snip] What you'll end up with is amplitude modulation with the modulating frequency being the beat note between your spinning speed and the wave frequency. This creates sidebands. You'll see this when the sidebands are within the bandwidth of the helix. Outside that, the helix will filter off the sidebands and you'll just see the "carrier" -- the original wave with no modulation. [snip] Hmmm... Yes, I agree and that's partially correct, but some of the above paragraph is somewhat "fuzzy" to say the least. That helix must be a very sharp [brick wall???] filter, no? Let's get real here, no practical implementation of any kind of physical filtering mechanism can filter with infinitely sharp transition bands. It just doesn't happen in nature. [snip] Here's a really neat little trick you might want to add to your bag -- superposition. As I mentioned, you can create a circularly polarized wave from two linearly polarized waves. The linearly polarized waves are of course normally time-varying. As long as the propagation medium is linear (such as air), superposition says you can split the circularly polarized wave apart into two linearly polarized waves, study and analyze how they propagate, then add the two components back together again after the propagation. This is, incidentally, a very simple way to see what happens when a circularly polarized wave reflects from a surface -- analyze the linear components separately and add the results. [snip] Heh, heh... Superposition is not a 'trick' it is a well known principle and Roy, I agree with all of the above! What's your point? Bringing up superposition is fine, but you seem to raise the concept of superposition simply as a digression here, not as a means of disproving my assertion that mechanically spinning a linear antenna is tantamount to conventional circular polarization. [snip] That's about all I can do at this end. I can't make you actually pick up a text and learn about circularly polarized waves, and until you do, you'll have some fundamental misconceptions about them. [snip] Hmmm... that was a cheap shot! Unfortunately I agree, YOU cannot make me pick up a text. However, I can make myself do so myself, and... it may (or may not) interest you to know that I have done so on many occasions. In fact I have picked up several such texts, addressing such subject matter authored by Physicists and Engineers ranging over subjects as diverse as radio frequency antennas and optics. Would it impress you if I sent you a picture of my personal library of several hundred volumes, which contains perhaps a dozen or more textbooks on electromagnetics. Since I have been examined on these subjects at graduate degree levels by the faculty at several duly accredited Universities it seems that there is some evidence that I may have read and understood at least a few paragraphs from those texts that I "picked up"! [smile] [snip] Guess I'm one of those folks who someone described recently as "having the common sense educated out of me". It's served me well, since it's enabled me able to spend a career designing a wide variety of state of the art electronic circuits and antennas, successfully mass produced, which work as designed. But I know it's not for everyone. [snip] Hmmm... I too have spent (wasted?) most of several decades designing electronic products and equipment for international markets sold in more than 40 countries with at total sales volume exceeding $5BB dollars. And it seems in today's world that if you combine that Engineering experience with $2.50 you can buy a cup of coffee at Starbucks! Now that we have suitably set the stage, lets get back to the common sense Engineering question at hand! All I need is a number! Perhaps I should regurgitate the statement of Lord Kelvin about knowledge that dear departed Reg used to quote. You know... the one about quantifying things, the one that says you know nothing unless you can put a number to it! Do I really need to do that here? Reggie dear friend, are you watching from above? Roy, please answer the following common sense Engineering questions, just how close must the angular velocity of my spinning antenna be to the carrier frequency before YOU will allow it to be called circular polarization? A simple numerical value in percentage form would do fine! [smile] -- Pete K1PO -- Indialantic By-the-Sea, FL |
#16
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On Sun, 7 Dec 2008 00:22:05 -0500, "Peter O. Brackett"
wrote: On Sat, 06 Dec 2008 15:49:26 -0800, Roy Lewallen wrote: Guess I'm one of those folks who someone described recently as "having the common sense educated out of me". Roy, please answer the following common sense Engineering questions, And I thought Abbott and Costello were dead - but evidently not their "Who's on First?" routine. :-/ 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#17
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Peter O. Brackett wrote:
. . . Yes indeed, we must be talking at cross purposes, since we seem to have no disagreement on any of the above. I don't see where we differ at all! For starters, a circularly polarized wave, as universally understood, has an E field which is constant in amplitude, rotates in synchronism with the rotational frequency of the field, and has a particular relationship to constituent linearly polarized components. The field you're generating doesn't, yet you're calling it "circularly polarized". [snip] Would the rate of spin have to be 99-44/100 percent of the synchronous frequency? Or would it have to be closer than that? At what magic spin frequency would the two be indistinguisable. [snip] I would repeat the above question in a slightly different way... How much frequency, or for that matter phase, difference must there be between the mechanical spin frequency and the carrier frequency before you could tell the difference between your "conventionally defined" circular polarization and my definition? Any difference at all. If there's even a tiny difference, the E field will change in amplitude with time. If it's perfectly synchronous it won't. The rate at which it changes with time is the difference between the field rotation frequency and the frequency of the generated signal. If they're synchronous, the difference is zero, and no change in amplitude with time. If my antenna was spining with an angular velocity within say, 0.000000000005% of the carrier frequency, would that do it? If by "it" you mean make the difference non-discernible, the answer is no. See above. Or perhaps my spin rate would have to be closer to the carrier frequency than that? See above. If so, then how close does it have to be to qualify to be called circular polarization under (your) traditional/conventional definition? They have to be identical. See above. The question you posed earlier was different, involving detection of the difference with a particular kind of antenna. Like the linear antenna you used in another example, it filters the signal which alters its properties. So my answer to this new question is different. [snip] What you'll end up with is amplitude modulation with the modulating frequency being the beat note between your spinning speed and the wave frequency. This creates sidebands. You'll see this when the sidebands are within the bandwidth of the helix. Outside that, the helix will filter off the sidebands and you'll just see the "carrier" -- the original wave with no modulation. [snip] Hmmm... Yes, I agree and that's partially correct, but some of the above paragraph is somewhat "fuzzy" to say the least. That helix must be a very sharp [brick wall???] filter, no? No. Let's get real here, no practical implementation of any kind of physical filtering mechanism can filter with infinitely sharp transition bands. It just doesn't happen in nature. That's not required, although I see it's how you've interpreted my use of "bandwidth". There is no such brick wall rejection region. [snip] Here's a really neat little trick you might want to add to your bag -- superposition. As I mentioned, you can create a circularly polarized wave from two linearly polarized waves. The linearly polarized waves are of course normally time-varying. As long as the propagation medium is linear (such as air), superposition says you can split the circularly polarized wave apart into two linearly polarized waves, study and analyze how they propagate, then add the two components back together again after the propagation. This is, incidentally, a very simple way to see what happens when a circularly polarized wave reflects from a surface -- analyze the linear components separately and add the results. [snip] Heh, heh... Superposition is not a 'trick' it is a well known principle and Roy, I agree with all of the above! What's your point? You don't believe that a wave with constant amplitude E field can propagate. My point is that the constant E field amplitude circularly polarized wave can be made of the sum of two time-varying waves. Each of these waves can propagate. If you're familiar with superposition it should be obvious that the original wave can be split into those components, each component and its propagation can be analyzed separately, and the results summed at the far end of the path. That's how a CP wave having a constant amplitude can propagate. Bringing up superposition is fine, but you seem to raise the concept of superposition simply as a digression here, not as a means of disproving my assertion that mechanically spinning a linear antenna is tantamount to conventional circular polarization. No, it was brought up to demonstrate how a wave having a constant amplitude E field can propagate. You had used the argument that a circularly polarized wave can't propagate because its E field has a constant amplitude, as support for your incorrect assertion that the amplitude of the E field of a circularly polarized varies with time. A circularly polarized wave has a constant amplitude E field, which can be easily demonstrated from the equations describing it. It propagates. Your pseudo-circularly polarized wave doesn't have a constant amplitude E field, which is only one way it differs from a circularly polarized wave. [snip] That's about all I can do at this end. I can't make you actually pick up a text and learn about circularly polarized waves, and until you do, you'll have some fundamental misconceptions about them. [snip] Hmmm... that was a cheap shot! Unfortunately I agree, YOU cannot make me pick up a text. However, I can make myself do so myself, and... it may (or may not) interest you to know that I have done so on many occasions. In fact I have picked up several such texts, addressing such subject matter authored by Physicists and Engineers ranging over subjects as diverse as radio frequency antennas and optics. Would it impress you if I sent you a picture of my personal library of several hundred volumes, which contains perhaps a dozen or more textbooks on electromagnetics. Since I have been examined on these subjects at graduate degree levels by the faculty at several duly accredited Universities it seems that there is some evidence that I may have read and understood at least a few paragraphs from those texts that I "picked up"! [smile] I'm impressed, but it's not apparent to me why, with those resources available, you're having trouble finding how the amplitude of the circularly polarized wave E field varies with time, or applying superposition to discover how it propagates. Choose one or two of your texts which has the equations for circularly polarized waves. Chances are good that I have the same text, and if you'd like I can show you how to derive the instantaneous E field amplitude from the equations. But I'm afraid you would have to pick it up to find the equations. But if you can do that, you might be able to write the equations describing your signal, and then the differences between it and the CP equations should become obvious. [snip] Guess I'm one of those folks who someone described recently as "having the common sense educated out of me". It's served me well, since it's enabled me able to spend a career designing a wide variety of state of the art electronic circuits and antennas, successfully mass produced, which work as designed. But I know it's not for everyone. [snip] Hmmm... I too have spent (wasted?) most of several decades designing electronic products and equipment for international markets sold in more than 40 countries with at total sales volume exceeding $5BB dollars. And it seems in today's world that if you combine that Engineering experience with $2.50 you can buy a cup of coffee at Starbucks! Now that we have suitably set the stage, lets get back to the common sense Engineering question at hand! All I need is a number! Oh, if that's all you need, 42 is always a good choice. Perhaps I should regurgitate the statement of Lord Kelvin about knowledge that dear departed Reg used to quote. You know... the one about quantifying things, the one that says you know nothing unless you can put a number to it! Do I really need to do that here? Reggie dear friend, are you watching from above? Roy, please answer the following common sense Engineering questions, just how close must the angular velocity of my spinning antenna be to the carrier frequency before YOU will allow it to be called circular polarization? It must be exactly the same. A simple numerical value in percentage form would do fine! 0. |
#18
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![]() Peter O. Brackett wrote: Now transmit on that dipole antenna whilst mechanically spinning it clockwise [RHCP?] (with a mechanical motor of some kind). The dipole antenna is linear and thuse emits linear polariztion, except it is mechanically spinning, and so the E vector emanating from the antenna will be rotating with respect to its direction of travel. In this case the angular velocity of the motor that spins the linear antenna need not be synchronous with the frequency being radiated. For example we could mechanically spin the antenna at 330 rpm while transmitting a carrier of 1 GHz. This would most certainly produce circular polarization. For is not the E vector spinning at 330 revs! Andy writes: It sounds to me like you are describing the technique for generating an aircraft VOR signal, which has been in use for well over 50 years. The VOR band is 108 - 117 Mhz, and the antenna is a cardoid pattern that is rotated mechanically at a 30 hz rate. At a distant point this results in a 30 hz amplitude modulation of the received signal, which is one of the components used in the signal processing for the receiver to determine the direction to or from the ground VOR station. Simply rotating the antenna does not result in circular polarization, but rather it changes the field strength of the radiated signal at a point in space.... The received signal is therefore modulated in amplitude as the pattern passes a singular distant point in space..... I just wanted to throw this in the mix, since rotating the antenna has been around for a long time. Of course it can be done electronically now, but the initial systems were simply turned by a motor. Andy W4OAH , ex- aircraft nav system designer....long retired. |
#19
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Andy:
Hey, thanks for your input. I know about VOR systems and other similar systems such as TACAN. Indeed they do use rotating antennas. However VOR and TACAN use rotating antennas in the same way as rotating PPI radar antennas, that is they emit linearly polarized waves whilst rotating the direction of highest directivity/gain. They do not emit circular polariztion as such. Rather they emit linear polarization whilst aiming or directing the 'beam' of linear polarized waves as they rotate. Sort of like rotating a flashlight, or the beam of a searchlight or coastal lighthouse. I'm not sure that anyone yet (that includes Roy Lewalen) has fully understood exactly what I was trying to convey. I'm afraid that the true nature of circular polarization is not well understood by many. Perhaps opitical scientists understand circular polarization best, if only because most of the important 'applications' of circular polarization are in the field of optics rather than radio. -- Pete K1PO -- Indialantic, By-the-Sea, FL "AndyS" wrote in message ... Peter O. Brackett wrote: Now transmit on that dipole antenna whilst mechanically spinning it clockwise [RHCP?] (with a mechanical motor of some kind). The dipole antenna is linear and thuse emits linear polariztion, except it is mechanically spinning, and so the E vector emanating from the antenna will be rotating with respect to its direction of travel. In this case the angular velocity of the motor that spins the linear antenna need not be synchronous with the frequency being radiated. For example we could mechanically spin the antenna at 330 rpm while transmitting a carrier of 1 GHz. This would most certainly produce circular polarization. For is not the E vector spinning at 330 revs! Andy writes: It sounds to me like you are describing the technique for generating an aircraft VOR signal, which has been in use for well over 50 years. The VOR band is 108 - 117 Mhz, and the antenna is a cardoid pattern that is rotated mechanically at a 30 hz rate. At a distant point this results in a 30 hz amplitude modulation of the received signal, which is one of the components used in the signal processing for the receiver to determine the direction to or from the ground VOR station. Simply rotating the antenna does not result in circular polarization, but rather it changes the field strength of the radiated signal at a point in space.... The received signal is therefore modulated in amplitude as the pattern passes a singular distant point in space..... I just wanted to throw this in the mix, since rotating the antenna has been around for a long time. Of course it can be done electronically now, but the initial systems were simply turned by a motor. Andy W4OAH , ex- aircraft nav system designer....long retired. |
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![]() Peter O. Brackett wrote: Sort of like rotating a flashlight, or the beam of a searchlight or coastal lighthouse. Andy comments: Exactly right !!! And a good analogy.... Consider this then: A patch antenna, circularly polarized, mounted at the end of a motor shaft, rotating in the opposite direction of the polarization... ..... at a speed equal to the frequency... Does the polarization "unravel" and emit a linear, non-rotating polarization ? Is this the sort of principle that you were trying to convey ?? If this is the case, any discrepancy in the motor, say 1 hz out of 10 Mhz , would result in an Efield rotating at a 1 hz rate.... and the receiving antenna would have to be very very very long in order to fully receive the polarized wave....... I think.... And if the motor shaft and the frequency were identical, the Efield would be linear, stable, and non-rotating..... This is getting beyond my personal antenna expertise, but I still find it interesting....... Please pardon my lack of understanding, .... if I still don't "get" it.... Andy W4OAH |
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