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Look at a polar antenna plot (either in the vertical (elevation) or
horizontal plane, though horiz would be best for this exercise). The greater the gain *straight* forward the less the angle that the gain is within say -3dB of the peak. F/B ratio is a measure of how much more sensitive it is dead ahead compared to dead behind, and ignores the sensitivity at any other angle, generally (but not always) there will be one large lobe pointed forward and only little bumps in sensitivity to the sides. Another way to think of it (a thought experiment if you will) is as a garden hose w/ a fine stream out the front (very high gain and very high F/B ratio (very little water shoots straight back at you, and only a small spot that you aim at gets wet, vs. a hose w/ the end cut off and flattened to form a flat fanlike spray -- still good F/B (you stay dry) but the water goes less far and covers a bigger horiz angle. Last, imagine you unflatten the open hose end, point it straight up and hold a plate over it so water sprays in every direction horizontally -- this is an omnidirectional pattern (like a dipole, where RF leaves perpendicular to the wire or element) and goes even less distance (gain) but goes in every horizontal direction. In all cases the same amount of water comes out, but as you change the nozzle you send more in one direction at the expense of all the others. The antenna is the same when transmitting or receiving (collecting if you will) RF energy. If your hose has some small pinholes in it you may get "side lobes" but they will usually be narrow angled or weak (low gain) -- differant cause than the antenna, but same effect for the purposed of the thought experiment. Last, if you had a hollow spherical ball much bigger than the hose diameter that fastened on the hose's end and this ball had little holes evenly spaced all over it (and a good imagination) water would go in EVERY direction EQUALLY -- the equvalent of the *theoretical* isotropic antenna. The analogy is not exact, but it should give a feel of the thing. Note too some water or RF goes out at an angle from horiz (this is what you see in the vertical plane polar charts) and if you hold th ehose or antenna too close to the ground none can go down (it either soaks into the ground or bounces off and goes upward a bit) giving a slight "takeoff angle" to the beam (or stream). That help, or only confuse? "Fractenna" wrote in message ... Then how come it doesn't give us 20db of forward gain? It does, if you (incorrectly ) define forward gain as being relative to the backside. As I said, the signal (that) now no longer goes out the back gets its power---redistributed--and that redistribution is like pushing the air forward. It doesn't -- all-- get concentrated in one spot up front, thus the forward gain isn't 20 dB. 73, Chip N1IR |
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