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On 14 Jun 2004 11:53:37 -0700, (David Harper) wrote:
Thanks! You know any simple phased array configurations that are easy to mathmatically model?... In a follow-up to your post Roy, W7EL, suggested modeling an array with his **FREE** EZNEC demo. I'll second that motion. EZNEC is well worth learning to use if one is doing any kind of antenna analysis, even back-of-the-envelope guesstimates. Here's what I would do to get a high-gain array with EZNEC: Place a large number of 1/10-wavelength wires in a row, end to end, and separated from each other by 1/2 wavelength. Place a current source in the middle of each, up to the maximum number allowed by the EZNEC demo version. Set each current source to 1 amp at zero degrees. Force each wire to consist of only one segment - this makes the current in it uniform. Have EZNEC evaluate the pattern in the same plane as the wires. This is a one-dimensional phased-array. You can vary the amplitude and phase of the individual current sources to experiment with beam steering. And you can change the spacing for the individual elements out to 1 wavelength and beyond to see what that does. It's a lot of fun to watch what happens. This should be a relatively easy configuration to write a far-field expression for if you are so inclined. Math never was my strong suite, so I'm out of my element and can't give you much help. (Hey, we're just a bunch of ham-radio operators here). Have fun! Jim, K7JEB |
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