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Vertical Monopole Radiation Characteristics
On Jan 1, 11:21*am, wrote:
I haven't really given this much thought, but seems to me the low angle radiation that does reach the ionosphere and would be useful for very long ranges would be considered the lower angles of the space wave, and would be separate from the ground or surface wave... I totally agree. That is the point I have been trying to make: radiation from low elevation angles is not attenuated virtually to zero before it reaches the ionosphere. RF |
Vertical Monopole Radiation Characteristics
Richard Fry wrote:
On Jan 1, 11:21 am, wrote: I haven't really given this much thought, but seems to me the low angle radiation that does reach the ionosphere and would be useful for very long ranges would be considered the lower angles of the space wave, and would be separate from the ground or surface wave... I totally agree. That is the point I have been trying to make: radiation from low elevation angles is not attenuated virtually to zero before it reaches the ionosphere. RF I'm completely confused about the point you were trying to make. You called NEC results "misleading" when showing only "far field" (sky wave, without surface wave) results, and implied that the surface wave must be considered when determining skip performance. Are you now agreeing that it correctly shows the amount of radiation at low angles which is capable of reaching the ionosphere? If so, what's misleading about it? Or are you saying that the field strength capable of reaching the ionosphere at low angles is greater than NEC "far field" (sky wave) analysis reports? And if so, how much greater and why? Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
Vertical Monopole Radiation Characteristics
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Vertical Monopole Radiation Characteristics
On Jan 1, 3:46*pm, Roy Lewallen wrote:
I'm completely confused about the point you were trying to make. You called NEC results "misleading" when showing only "far field" (sky wave, without surface wave) results, and implied that the surface wave must be considered when determining skip per- formance. No, I did not write that the surface wave must be considered when determining skywave performance. Your understanding of what I posted is incorrect. Please re-read what I posted previously, and quote us any of my text that you believe supports your present conclusion about this. Do you reject the data in the Terman and Laport plots I linked to showing that the most distant, single-hop skywave coverage over a real, curved earth originates from space wave radiation at very low elevation angles (less than 5 degrees above the horizontal plane at the transmit antenna site)? Are you now agreeing that it (far-field NEC) correctly shows the amount of radiation at low angles which is capable of reaching the ionosphere? Absolutely not, and I am rather surprised that, apparently, you believe and support this concept. RF |
Vertical Monopole Radiation Characteristics
On Dec 31 2008, 4:10*pm, Roy Lewallen wrote:
dBi is more than just dB. It's field strength (in dB) relative to a known standard. Roy, certainly you must recognize that the term dBi is not a direct unit, or measure of field intensity (field strength). The direct, primary unit of measure of field intensity in accurate, common use is volts/meter (V/m). The term dBi is only a measure of the relative gain of a particular radiator in particular directions stated in decibels with respect to an isotropic radiator. Other things equal, the field intensity at a given location is determined by the gain of a transmit antenna system along paths serving that location ALONG WITH the matched, r-f power applied to the feedpoint of that antenna. The gain of a transmit antenna system in dBi includes nothing about the absolute amount of power it radiates in various directions. Therefore by itself, antenna gain(s) in dBi cannot define the absolute field intensity in standard units/sub-units of V/m that such an antenna can produce at a given location. Ergo "dBi" is not a measure of absolute field intensity (field strength). RF |
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