Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#16
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Richard Clark wrote:
"Salt water is miserable as a conductor, and its special place in the pantheon of noble applications has little to do with conductivity." I praise the god of conductivity for the ocean`s behavior as a beniign enabler of medium wave propagation over extraordinary distances as compared with ordinary earth. The reason the ocean`s surface allows long distance propagation is explained in part on page 15 by Ed Laport in "Radio Antenna Engineering": "Nothing can be done about the electrical characteristics of the grouind or topography between transmitting and receiving antennas. By choice, it is possible to locate the antennas in areas of the best available soil conductivity, thus to increase the terminal efficiency to some extent, and to increase this efficiency still further by proper design of the grounding system. (For ground waves vertical systems are imperative as there is zero horizontally polarized ground wave propagation.) Optimum ground-wave propagation is obtained over salt water because of its conductivity (many times that of the best soils to be found on the land) and uniform topography." Laport has a ground-wave propagation table on page 17 of "Radio Antenna Engineering". It is for low frequencies which best exploit ground-waves. At 1000 miles over seawater, a wave at 400 KHz is attenuated by 98 dB. Over good soil, 111 dB. Over poor soil, 160 dB. Soil resistance determines penetration depth nto the soil and loss that the soil extracts from a wave, especially if the frequency isn`t too high. At 10 MHz and above, over real earth, the earth`s capacitance offers so much less opposition than the earth`s resistance that the earth`s resistive opposition really does have very little to do with conductivity. However low the soil conductivity is, it is effectively bypassed by the earth`s susceptance. Sea water is so good at limiting medium-wave penetration and loss that broadcast stations can be heard far out at sea during daylight hours. This range is much greater than over any type of land. I recall hearing the steel guitars of Hawaiian music when we were approaching from the U.S.A. during WW-2. We were still days away and the sun could be high in the sky. It wasn`t all that far as we only traveled about 250 miles a day in good seas. Field strength increases by 6 dB every time you cut the remaining distamnce by half as you approach the station. At half the distance the volts per meter double. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Inverted ground plane antenna: compared with normal GP and low dipole. | Antenna | |||
Salt Water Ground Plane | Antenna | |||
QST Article: An Easy to Build, Dual-Band Collinear Antenna | Antenna |