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Harold E. Johnson wrote,
It ends when the wave front arriving at the receiving antenna becomes planar. ie, to function efficiently in the far field, the receiving antenna needs to intercept a planar wavefront. That is, the individual rays need to be arriving in parallel. If the distance between antennas is very great, that is very nearly the case. If the capture area of the receiving antenna is great relative to the distance to the source, the received energy arrives as non parallel rays that basically reach the receiving antenna out of phase with each other and partially cancel. So, the gain of antennas measured in the "near field", where the received energy is not a planar wavefront, will be in error. The distance to the end of the near field is highly dependent on the gain of the antenna and with UHF and SHF antennas often exhibiting very high gain, their near fields can be and often are very large. Balanis divides the near-field region into two parts: a reactive near-field R0.62 square root(D^3/Lambda) where D is the largest antenna dimension, Lambda is the wavelength, and R is the distance from the antenna surface, and a radiating near-field region R2D^2/Lambda. The far-field he defines as anything greater than 2D^2/Lambda. He gives exceptions to these rules, so take them with a grain of salt. 73, Tom Donaly, KA6RUH |
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