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On Wed, 29 Jun 2005 13:56:53 -0700, Frank Gilliland
wrote: Well, let's put it this way: the radio and antenna don't connect to the dielectric of a coax. ***** No it does not directly. I know this concept is not easy to see but at the begining of the coax, one can then consider the energy that travels down the coax as a TEM wave. It is inside the dielectric where the E and H fields of the traveling wave can be measured and found. In transmission lines it is by far easier to think of E and H fields within the the transmission line. Once that concept is mastered then the rest is rather easy. When the wave reaches the end, you have the final induced currents. You can take a dipole and look at it as if the legs were an extension of the transmission line. This can better be seen if you consider a dipole and it is fed with open twin lead. The leads of the dipole then are an extention of the twin lead except they are now at 90 degrees to the transmission line. Current is high when the magnetic field is high. This is so because the induced current is controlled by the density of the magnetic field. The E field is high when magnetic field is low. The E field does not require current but voltage. On a center fed dipole the impedance is low and the corresponding currents are high. The E field off teh antenna is also low. As you progress a quarter wave from the feed point in either direction the H field increases and the E field decreases. With increasing H field the RF currents induced in the antenna are high. Thus Ohm's law hald true. Z = I^2*R. Where R is the radiation resistance of the antenna. The ends of a center fed dipole are high impedance. james |
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