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![]() "John N9JG" wrote This is useful information to know. I don't know why the section about small loops in the Antenna Handbook doesn't mention this. BTW, how far does the near-field extend? ====================================== It's because neither the authors nor the editors were aware of it. The near-field on the surface of an antenna's conductors starts off at a very high value. The far-field is zero at zero distance. The near-field fades into the distance just the same as the ar-field - only much faster. It also has a radiation pattern which depends on an antenna's structure. For argument's sake, for an isotropic antenna (which doesn't exist), at a distance of 1/2/Pi = 1/6 of a wavelength from the antenna, the near-fields and far-fields are equal to each other but differ in phase. They both exist together and their effects on foreign bodies are inseparable from a measurements point of view. They exist seperately at all distances only as a mathematical fiction. The near-field of open-wire transmission lines is sensibly zero at a distance of 4 or 5 times the wire spacing but the radiation field is finite and very small. The radiation field increases with wire spacing and is a maximum when spacing is about 1/2-wavelength which nobody ever uses. This accounts for the lack of use of low-loss open-wire lines at UHF and higher frequencies. Back to Magloops where the measurement unit is loop diameter rather than wavelength and the near-field is mainly magnetic. The magnetic field falls off at a rate proportional to the cube of distance. I would be very happy with a distance of 1/2 the loop diameter or more between the loop and large foreign bodies such as the ground. Highly conductive metallic bodies merely slightly detune the loop with little additional loss. ---- Reg. |
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