Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hello, I have some doubts about standing waves on antennas that I hope
you could clarify! As far as I understood, in a generic transmission line where we want only carry power from a source to a load, we need to cancel the reflected wave by adapting the load with the impedance of the line. The result of this operation is S11=S22=0 and VWWR=1 that means no standing waves. As far as I understood, in an antenna we want to also avoid standing waves by having VWWR=1 in order to avoid overloading problem to the power stage... From theory I know that the best radiating condition for an antenna is when it resonates, that is, when there is a standing wave… is that correct? How this condition is compatible with a VWWR=1 (no standing waves) for a good antenna matching? Is there something that I’m not catching? Regards, Camelot |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Standing waves | Antenna | |||
Poynting Vector in Standing Waves | Antenna | |||
Standing morphing to travelling waves, and other stupid notions | Antenna | |||
Standing Waves (and Impedance) | Antenna | |||
Imaginary Standing Waves? | Antenna |