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Peter O. Brackett wrote:
Jerry: [snip] "Jerry" wrote in message ... . . . I thought the FF Tab data in EZNEC was very informative for analyzing the circularity of the antennas i tried to analyze with EZNEC. Perhaps you know of some additional data that would assist me in better understanding the polarization of these antennas. Tell me what is left out of Roy's data in EZNEC. Jerry KD6JDJ [snip] Apparently nothing! Jerry it seems that I have an older version of EZNEC, a version that did not support CP outputs. I just contacted Roy todayh and ordered the latest upgrade to EZNEC + version 5 which Roy tells me supports CP outputs. But... one thing about NEC is that it does not support antennas in motion. NEC and all of the commercial software that is derived from this (US Taxpayer supported code, God Bless the US Taxpayer!) do not support antennas in motion. Rather NEC supports only static antennas in steady state excitation. And, why would this be "important"... it doesn't support arbitrary terrain surfaces either, nor non-uniform soil properties. Since the vast majority of "amateur radio" antennas (this is r.r.a.a, after all) can be modeled adequately by NEC. If you need more, fork out the bucks for a FEM code that does what you need. There may be some "multi-physics" programs/software out there that can calculate radiated fields for antennas in motion, but I am not aware of them. Of course I'm not an expert and I have not done any research on this topic and so I don't personally know of any programs that can produce CP outputs for antennas that are in motion, specifically symmetric antennas that are rotating at some arbitrary angular rotation velocity with respect to their axis of symmetry. As you say, you've not researched it. I would suggest that the need for such a thing is fairly small, but I'll bet someone somewhere has done it, just not as a "end user" software product. Certainly, there IS a lot of modeling of EM waves from moving objects (radar reflections being of particular interest). Depends on the relative scales, too. If you're talking waves from a meter scale object viewed from kilometers away, then using a point source approximation for the object will work nicely, and then it's just simple geometry. |
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