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All small (compared to a wavelength) loops have the same pattern
and an infinite-depth null. Alas, they have separate patterns for electrical and magnetic fields. A tall loop tends to act as a vertical antenna and pick up plenty of electric field. So where you have your nice automatic magnetic field infinite null, it's filled in by electric field which can't be cancelled by a magnetic field since it's 90 degrees out of phase (otherwise it would just shift the null). Shortwave tends to give you electric field responses faster than MW, just owing to the relative size of the loop and the wave getting larger as the wave gets smaller. In addition, as said, multiple or moving apparent sources owing to ionospheric bounce may make a permanent null difficult to find. Careful construction is said to reduce the electric field response to something very small, so you get deep unfilled-in nulls. An amplifier on the loop amplifies the magnetic field response mostly, and so gives the same effect as good construction without having to have good construction. -- Ron Hardin On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
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