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On 2/22/2010 8:54 AM, Richard Fry wrote:
On Feb 22, 5:51 am, Richard Fry wrote: The loop antennas suggested by others may work well, as they are vertically polarized for the E-field (as is the loopstick of a typical consumer-type AM broadcast receiver). To correct myself, loopsticks respond to the magnetic field of an EM wave -- which, for vertical polarization, lie in the horizontal plane. Hello, and this is a common misunderstanding, which may owe to the fact of the response of a receiving antenna in a near (induction) field of a transmitting antenna. In the far field (several wavelengths or greater) from the transmitting antenna the receiving antenna responds to the propagated electromagnetic field. Now, how a particular antenna is oriented wrt this EM field will determine its ability to extract a given amount of available power from the incident EM wave. One can of course think of the action of loops or dipoles in the far field as per Richard's statement but that sidesteps the underlying physics. Sincerely, -- John Wood (Code 5520) e-mail: Naval Research Laboratory 4555 Overlook Avenue, SW Washington, DC 20375-5337 |
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