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First of all, my apologies. As you can gather it is the first time I post in
this newsgroup. In the process, the computer kept on telling me that I required authentification (I had forgotten to click on one of the boxes) and said that it could not send the message. I therefore ended up writting it several times. As it turned out, two of the times where it told me it had not sent it, it had. I greatly apologise for all the inconvenience. Secondly, yes, I mean to say the signal has a DC component. I would have thought that impulsive noise, being cause by electron movement would produce an AC signal, otherwise where does the DC come from? The importance of the time is because I would have thought that in the long term the antenna would resonate so as to produce a zero mean signal (AC). Sorry, the answer might be common sense but I just fail to see it. Thank you for your time and once again, sorry. "Galilea" wrote in message ... Hello, thank you for reading this post. When analysing wideband impulse signals from a wideband antenna I have realised that the average signal magnitude is not zero. I have thought this is because the reactance of the antenna at different frequencies varies and since it is a wideband antenna there can be energy measured since it is only for an extremely small period of time of 2-4 us. However, I am not sure and would greatly appreciate the views of this newsgroup. |
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