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K1TTT wrote:
On Jun 9, 10:38 pm, Jim Lux wrote: In fact, the ration between that stored energy and the amount flowing "through" (i.e. radiated away) is related to the directivity of the antenna: high directivity antennas have high stored energy (large magnetic and electric fields): the ratio of stored to radiated energy is "antenna Q" (analogous to the stored energy in a LC circuit leading to resonant rise). So, high directivity = high stored energy = high circulating energy = high I2R losses. this is a relationship i haven't heard of before... and would be very wary of stating so simply. I should have used arrows rather than equals signs. But it's basically a manifestation of Chu's idea combined with practical materials. Chu proposed the concept relating directivity and stored energy and physical size. A passively excited multi element array (like a Yagi) has to transfer energy from element to element to work, and it follows the characteristics outlined by Chu. And anything with circulating energy that gets carried by a conductor is going to have high(er) I2R losses than something that doesn't. it may be true for a specific type of antenna, MAYBE Yagi's, MAYBE rhombics or or close coupled wire arrays, but some of the most directive antennas are parabolic dishes which i would expect to have very low Q and extremely low losses. Interesting case there. Loss isn't all that low (typical parabolic antennas with their feed have an efficiency of 50-70%), although it IS low compared to the directivity. And, in fact, there's not much stored energy (so the Q is low). On the other hand a parabolic antenna is physically very large compared to a wavelength, so the Chu relationship holds. I'd have to think about whether one can count the energy in the wave propagating from feed to reflector surface as "stored", but I think not. Probably only the E and H fields at the reflector surface. you could also have an antenna with very high Q, very high i^2r losses, but very low directivity, so i would be careful about drawing a direct link between the two. Yes.. you're right.. the relations set an upper bound on what's possible.. That is, for a given directivity, you can get either small size and large stored energy (the Yagi-Uda or W8JK), or large size and small stored energy (the parabolic reflector and feed). As you note, a dummy load has very low directivity. |
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