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The celebrated Numerical Electromagnetic Code (NEC) developed largely at US taxpayer expense (Let's all Salute the US Taxpayers!) and generally released to the public for free provides algorithms for numerically integrating Maxwell's celebrated partial differential equations and so enables one to obtain numerical solutions to real practical problems such as the antenna field strengths at points in space due to modelled practical transmitting antennas. NEC codes are available for downloading from public WWW sites. The raw NEC codes however do not have modern GUI based interfaces are required to be 'driven' by Fortran style card decks and profide outputs as files and not in graphical form. Several enterprising folks/companies have added GUE capability including data visualization to enable a more user friendly interaction with the NEC codes. For example Roy Lewallen's (W7EL) famous EZNEC programs are one example of the widespread use of the public NEC codes that have been 'enhanced' by Roy to provide user friendly graphical (GUI) based input/output (I/O). Apparently the outputs from the 'raw' NEC codes provide field strengths only in rectangular co-ordinates and so... one cannot directly obtain readouts of the circular components for circularly polarized antennas. Thus it is relatively difficult for non-experts to print out or to plot field strengths in terms of right hand or left hand circular propagation co-ordinates. For example if one attempts to model a circularly polarized antenna such as an axial mode helix, NEC (EZNEC) certainly allows the modelling to occur by breaking the helix into small segments that approximate a real helix to whatever degree of accuracy is required. The difficulty comes when one attempts to plot or graph the circularily polarized fields resulting from the modelled antenna. NEC only provides rectangular (x-y-z) components for the fields and not direct circular components for the fields. It is relatively simple to calculate the circular components from NEC's rectangular component outputs, and a simple arithmetic transformation routine can be written to quickly and easily process the NEC outputs into circular outputs so that one can then obtain solutions for circularily polarized antennas expressed in terms of right and left hand circularly polarized components. It seems however that none of the extant GUI equipped NEC based programs such as EZNEC have implemented this (simple) transformation. I suppose that since the use of circularly polarized antennas is only a very small fraction of the use of rectilinearly polarized antennas and so the authors of NEC must have felt that their would not be much call for those outputs. In fact the output transform from rectilinear to circular components is trivial compared to most other aspects of NEC codes! But in truth there is not much (commercial) call or market for the use of circularly polarized output plots. Question for our own Roy Lewallen W7EL... Roy do you think that there would be much of a market for EXNEC to provide circular polarization outputs from EZNEC, and do you have any plans to implement output plots from EZNEC in terms of circular polarization? I can supply you with references to the needed transformations. Just a few lines of Fortran or Visual Basic should do it... Just asking? [smile] -- Pete K1PO -- Indialantic By-the-Sea, FL |
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