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Hi Roy,
I have read many of your articles, and I have no doubt you are correct. However, in the ideal case, specifically in the limit as the wire diameter goes to zero, the current perturbation from mutual inductance vanishes. (The mutual inductance does not vanish, only its impact on current distribution.) I just spent a few minutes playing around with EZNEC 3, and I was able to achieve a null of -52 dBi (-57 dBmax) for two half-wave elements, with nominal 90 degree spacing and 90 degree phasing. The wire size was as small as possible. This null was in the symmetry plane and directly in the anti-end-fire direction of course. I expect with more computational precision, and perhaps fine tuning frequencies and dimensions this null could be driven farther. The reported current imbalance was a maximum of 0.2%, mid-way between the center and the ends of the wires. The phase imbalance between the wires was a maximum of 0.2 degrees. I am not trying to say this is practical. I was just pointing out the Art's use of polygons and canceling phasors was not particularly unique. We have since learned that what Art is trying to accomplish is to eliminate all radiation in the back hemisphere. The cardioid example is obviously moot for his quest. 73, Gene W4SZ Roy Lewallen wrote: Gene Fuller wrote: Art, Why not? The cardioid pattern from a two-element array was reported back as least as far as 1937, by the famous George H. Brown. In the ideal case (free space, no losses, etc.) the radiation directly to the rear is precisely zero. If you add various real world effects then the back lobe is not precisely zero, and this is shown in the ARRL Antenna Book referenced by Cecil. . . . Actually, this isn't quite true. If you manage to get perfectly phased and equal magnitude currents in two identical elements where the phase angle equals 180 degrees minus the element spacing (such as the classic 90-degree fed, 90-degree spaced cardioid), you don't get an infinite front-back ratio. In the case of the cardioid with typical diameter quarter wavelength elements, you end up with around a 35 dB front/back ratio. With longer elements, close to a half wavelength, the front/back ratio can deteriorate to less than 10 dB when base currents are identical in magnitude and correctly phased. The reason is that the mutual coupling between elements alters the current distribution on the elements. The mutual coupling from element 1 to element 2 isn't the same as the coupling from element 2 to element 1 (the mutual Z is the same, but the coupled voltage and coupled impedance aren't). The net result is that the two elements have different current distributions, so despite having identical magnitude base currents the two elements don't generate equal magnitude fields. The overall fields from the two elements end up being imperfectly phased, also. This occurs for theoretically perfect and perfectly fed elements, and isn't due to "real world" effects. I published some comments about this effect in "Technical Correspondence" in July 1990 QST ("The Impact of Current Distribution on Array Patterns"). I'm certainly not the first to have observed it -- some papers published as early as the '40s are referenced in my article. But I had never seen its effect on front/back ratio of cardioids mentioned before. Modern versions of the ARRL Antenna Book clearly show the small reverse lobe of a typical antenna with quarter wavelength elements. I stumbled across it when doing some modeling with ELNEC, the predecessor of EZNEC, and originally thought it was an error in the program. You'll see it in a plot from the Cardioid.EZ EZNEC example file (which is also included with the demo program), and a brief explanation in the corresponding Antenna Notes file. A theoretically infinite front/back ratio can be achieved by modification of the base currents. The amount of modification required depends on the length and diameter of the elements. Only a small modification is needed if elements are a quarter wavelength high and small diameter, but in that case, real world effects will probably have at least as much and likely more of an effect on the front/back than the current distribution phenomenon. Rather drastic modification is required of the base currents of elements approaching a half wavelength high, however, as elaborated in the "Technical Correspondence" piece. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |