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On 8/24/2016 12:03 AM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Tue, 23 Aug 2016 15:57:27 -0400, rickman wrote: I've been told that the term "magnetic" loop is the same as "small" loop. Dunno. As I understand it, a magnetic loop is really a "shielded electrostatic loop", where E-field operation is blocked by the shield. It would seem that removing the E-field, and leaving the H-field, would make it a "magnetic loop": https://www.google.com/search?q=shielded+magnetic+loop+antenna&tbm=isch At some point, some clever person decided to do away with the E-field shield and tolerate the increased noise pickup, but still called it a "magnetic loop". I don't know if this is really true, but it seems possible. I've seen the shielded receiving loop antennas referred to as magnetic loops, but I was talking about transmitting loops. It refers to the facts that the near field of a small loop is mostly magnetic ( 1/10 lamda) and that they respond to the magnetic component of the EM wave. I'm not sure how that matters in real world use though as all antenna transmit both E and M in the far field. A small loop is different. It's where the circumference of the loop is sufficiently small, that the current through the loop is essentially constant at all points around the circumference. This results in something that operates like a dipole, but with the E and H fields interchanged. Interchanged because the constant current of the loop creates a significant magnetic field but not so much of an electric field not unlike a transformer. Real world? Well, we had some kind of discussion a few years ago in S.E.D. about WWVB polarization. I ran this study of how a loopstick antenna in a commodity WWVB receiver responds to different orientations: http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/WWVB%20test/ If you look at the WWVB antenna construction, it looks like a really big dipole: http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/WWVB%20test/WWVB-antenna-lowered.jpg Yet, the signal is vertically polarized: https://softsolder.com/2010/01/02/wwvb-groundwave-signal-is-vertically-polarized/ It's not a dipole, it's a monopole. The part you see is the top loading capacitor to improve the efficiency. Ok, that seems counter-intuitive, so it might be useful to prove it experimentally: End of the loopstick pointed at Denver (lousy signal): http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/WWVB%20test/end-pointed-at-WWVB.jpg Loopstick perpendicular to Denver and oriented up/down (lousy signal): http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/WWVB%20test/loopstick-vertical.jpg Loopstick perpendicular to Denver and oriented left/right (good signal): http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/WWVB%20test/loopstick-perpendicular-to-WWVB.jpg Yep, it's vertically polarized. -- Rick C |
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