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"Al" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message news:telamon_spamshield- Whatever the characteristic impedance of the wire is if you stimulate it with energy at some frequency it will react to that energy with a combination of the characteristic impedance and added to that a value of impedance based on the electrical length of the wire. The reactance of the the wire would be the combination of the characteristic impedance and the reflected energy together. Telamon Ventura, California Telaman, Perhaps the fault in my understanding is that there is more than one type of impedance talked about here and in other posts. Perhaps the speaker is talking about one and the listener is listening for the other. In the above paragraph you mention characteristic impedance and impedance based on electrical length. I conclude from your post here that the characteristic impedance always remains the same unless some physical changes are made to the components, antenna or feed-line. Whereas the other impedance (it would be nice if it also had a unique name rather than just other impedance) which is based on electrical length is therefore based on frequency. The introduction of frequency introduces reactance which affects the other impedance, but the characteristic impedance remains the same. If that is the case (please correct if not) then the following should be true: If I have an antenna with a characteristic impedance of, say, 600-ohms, and I have a coaxial feedline with a characteristic impedance of 50-ohms, the two are missmatched and I should use a balun (unun?) with a ratio of 600-ohms to 50-ohms to properly connect the two components. At this time I now have this antenna properly connected to this feedline, and as yet no frequency issues have been addressed. Is this correct? If yes, then it could be said that a balun (unun) matches these two physical devices without frequency of operation considerations. True? I'm not being argumentative, I'm asking. I have a loop antenna whose characteristic impedance I do not know. I want to determine its characteristic impedance. I also want to match it to my receiver (50-ohm nominal input) the best that I can. I ask myself if I need a matching device? These are the issues that I am working on and before I try to tackle the answer, I first want to understand the theory. Yes you are right about the fact that I am talking about two different things. 1. The "characteristic impedance" of a device. 2. The "impedance" to RF at some arbitrary frequency. People are used to thinking of #2 as a complex equivalent number of AC resistance to be calculated in circuit analysis problem. Antennas are a little different as we must consider all the ramifications of the actual physical construction of the device. In basic circuit analysis capacitors, inductors and resistors that make up a circuit are looked at as simplistic lumped elements. Calculating impedance to an AC signal implicitly means the circuit resistance to current flow must consider a frequency to compute a value. A better simulation of a circuit will consider the parasitics of the elements and the characteristics of the paths between them, including the electrical distance between them and through them for a more accurate answer at higher frequency operation but again the nature of coming to an equivalent value of impedance to a RF signal numerically requires the frequency be a part of the resistance to current flow. Antennas are transducers in a physical sense taking a local RF current loop and translating it into an EM wave through space. Other language would call this a near field to far field conversion. The antenna electrical and physical characteristics require that you look at more than just taking the view of circuit analysis affecting the local current loop or near field. The physical properties must also address the near field becoming the far field so the description of the antenna as an RF circuit must also be more complex. The antenna can not be seen as just a impedance number at some frequency because that would not address its implicit purpose or utility. Since an antenna is designed to be operated at some frequency the calculation of impedance is known or considered as integral to the meaning of the appearance of the value an antenna would present as a resistive load with no reactive component. This value is a combination of the conductor loses in the antenna itself, local current loop or near field and is in combination with the radiation resistance, EM field around the antenna or far field. Many paragraphs to come to the fact that antenna impedance implicitly uses a known frequency to compute the resistive value of the antenna as a load. A corollary here that is that when you mean to use the antenna at some frequency you adjust the electrical lengths accordingly so the antenna ends up being that characteristic impedance value where you intend to operate it so now the impedance value becomes a number irrespective of frequency because it is implicitly considered. Circular definitions at their best. This is all part of actually using an antenna. You start with a design, adjust the elements to be resonant in frequency you intend to use it. Changing the operating frequency means that you change the electrical length again to what is appropriate so you can see the frequency of operation does not matter and that the antenna has a "characteristic impedance value" when speaking about that design in a generic sense because you make the adjustments to it in actuality. Answering your question above if the antenna was a balance type where the coax is inherently unbalanced then you would use the BALUN to transform the 50 ohm impedance of the transmission line path to the 600 ohm resistive load of the antenna. BAL-UN is a term meaning BALanced to UNbalanced for an impedance transforming device. If you used an inherently unbalanced single wire to the coax then you would use an UNUN. UN-UN means UNbalanced to UNbalanced. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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