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"Michael R. Davis" wrote in message
... I'm reading an article about antenna aperature. Is it correct to state that dipoles have a very large aperature and something like a horn assembly used in microwaves has a tiny aperature except for wavelength for which the horn is designed? Just trying to get a handle on this advanced theory. Dipole aperture is the capture area which translates an incident field, in W/m^2, to the actual power received by the dipole. For example the aperture for a half wave dipole is 0.13(Lambda)^2, where Lambda is the wavelength in meters. A 40 m half wave dipole would therefore have an aperture of 52 m^2. A horn aperture, and also a parabolic dish, aperture is the physical area of the mouth of the horn. Regards. Frank |
#2
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Frank wrote:
Dipole aperture is the capture area which translates an incident field, in W/m^2, to the actual power received by the dipole. For example the aperture for a half wave dipole is 0.13(Lambda)^2, where Lambda is the wavelength in meters. A 40 m half wave dipole would therefore have an aperture of 52 m^2. A horn aperture, and also a parabolic dish, aperture is the physical area of the mouth of the horn. Regards. Frank Well, I sure read _that_ wrong! Thanks for clearing that up. |
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