Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Szczepan Białek" wrote in message ... "Dave Platt" wrote ... In article , Jeff Liebermann wrote: I forgot to connect my comments to the original question. Sorry(tm). You're correct. There's no way to get a good isotropic radiator pattern with a simple vertical radiator. However, you can still get fairly close if you make the antenna sufficiently small relative to the operating wavelength. As the physical antenna size approaches a point radiator, the pattern starts to look rather spherical. The difference in pattern between a half-wavelength dipole, and an infinitesimally-short dipole (i.e. one whose length approaches a point source) is actually quite small. A dipole is always the two monopoles and never a point source. Only monopole is a point source. S* Nonsense. Only a point can be a point source. The principle of the infinitesimal electric doublet is the hypothetical result of making the lengths of the elements of a balanced dipole vanishingly small. This is useful to quantify the characteristics of the limiting case but, because of its inherent axial symmetry, it still has the form of a dipole and the same kind of radiation pattern with linear polarisation and no radiation in the directions aligned with the ends of the dipole (for the reason I gave earlier in this thread). Monopole antennas are developed from dipoles by substituting one of the elements, often using a 'reflection' of the remaining element in a ground plane. Their characteristics are different from those of the parent dipole because of this substitution but they still have the same kind of axially-symmetric radiation pattern, with linear polarisation and no radiation in the direction of the end of the monopole. A point source is a hypothetical 'device' that radiates equally in all directions. Obviously this could not be realised using a monopole because that would provide the wrong radiation pattern. A polarisation can be assigned to a point source, for the sake of comparison with real antennas (which is how the point source is used), just as a point source can be considered as transmitting or receiving a signal - but that doesn't mean a physical antenna can be made that has the same characteristics, that can be made to transmit or receive. Chris |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Force 12 - C3S | Antenna | |||
Air Force 1 | Shortwave | |||
Air Force One | Shortwave | |||
FS: Force 12 | Swap | |||
Force 12 C-4 | Antenna |