Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#29
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dot wrote:
On Fri, 24 Feb 2006 22:41:54 GMT, Cecil Moore wrote: Roy Lewallen wrote: Resonance has everything to do with impedance. Resonance is defined as any frequency at which the impedance is purely resistive; ... In the distant past, when I had a dinosaur for a pet, resonance was defined as the frequency at which the impedance is a purely low impedance. The frequency at which the impedance was a purely high resistance was known at the anti-resonant point, the exact opposite of resonance, and indeed, it was the exact other side of the SWR circle on a Smith Chart. These days, resonance is described as either: a) the point at which Inductive Reactance and Capacitive Reactance are equal or b) the point at which a load impedence is purely resistive. The two points are exactly the same. Looking at your definitions I would suggest that "resonance" is really the point at which the antenna mimics a series resonant circuit, exhibiting a low impedence and "anti-resonance" is the point at which it mimics a parallel resonant circuit, exhibiting a high impedence. The high-impedance full-wave resonant point (for a dipole; half-wave resonant point for a monopole) is sometimes called "anti-resonance", but not commonly, and mostly in older literature. It's a true point of resonance, that is, where the reactance is zero. I don't believe I've ever heard the term "anti-resonance" applied to other high-impedance resonant circuits, such as a tank circuit. It would then be reasonable for a given wire perpendicular to a good ground plane to exhibit "resonance" at odd multiples of a quarter wavelength and "anti-resonance" at even multiples of a quarter wavelength... Translating gives low impedence at odds and high impedence at evens, which is where I started out in this discussion.... If you choose to call the high-impedance resonant points "anti-resonance", that's true. But again, they're points where the reactance is zero, just like the points you're calling "resonant". The only difference is that the impedance is high and the antenna acts more like a parallel tuned circuit at nearby frequencies rather than a series tuned circuit. Your semantics is correct if you are looking to define an antenna as "a current fed device", but that's not always the case. There are end fed half waves out there... they are voltage fed, they are resonant and they do work. (Ask anyone who owns a "Ringo Ranger".) No, the definition of resonance has nothing to do with how an antenna is fed. The impedance of the antenna doesn't change with the feed method (assuming of course that it has a single feed point), and therefore its resonant frequencies don't change with the feed method. (You can, of course, alter the resonant frequencies of an antenna *system* by adding reactance at the feedpoint or elsewhere.) And an antenna doesn't have to be resonant (that is, have a non-reactive feedpoint impedance) to "work". Resonance is only an indication of the reactance of the input impedance, and has nothing to do with an antenna's gain, pattern, bandwidth, or other performance characteristics. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Info - Icom IC-R75 with Kiwa Mods and Antenna Supermarket Eavesdropper SWL Sloper | Shortwave | |||
Loading Coil Q | Antenna | |||
Current in loading coil, EZNEC - helix | Antenna | |||
The "TRICK" to TV 'type' Coax Cable [Shielded] SWL Loop Antennas {RHF} | Antenna | |||
The "TRICK" to TV 'type' Coax Cable [Shielded] SWL Loop Antennas {RHF} | Shortwave |