Antenna Parameters
Antenna Parameters
Antenna Parameters
TIRUPATI
Department of Electronics And Communication Engineering
ANTENNA PARAMETERS
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Contents
Radiation pattern
Radian
Steradian
Polarization
Gain
FNBW & HPBW
Directive gain
Directivity
Radiation Intensity
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Antenna Apertures
Antenna Resolution
Effective height
Field zones
Shape Impedance
considerations
Antenna temperature
FBR
Beam Area
Beam Efficiency
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Electromagnetic Waves
Electromagnetic
transmissions move in
space as Transverse
waves
Waves are
characterized by
frequency
v and
f
wavelength:
Wave front :
An imaginary surface joining all points in space that are
reached at the same instant by a wave propagating through
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Direction of wave
propagation
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Radiation pattern
In the field of antenna design the
term radiation pattern (or
antenna pattern or far-field
pattern)refers to the directional
(angular) dependence of the strength
of the radio waves from the antenna
or other source
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An angle's measurement in
radians is numerically equal to
the length of a corresponding arc
of a unit circle; one radian is just
under 57.3 degrees (when the
arc length is equal to the
radius).
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steradian
polarization
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Gain
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Directive Gain
It is the ratio of the power density in in a particular direction at a given point
to the power that would be radiated at the same distance by an omni-antena.
Directivity
The directivity
D=
It is the maximum directive gain.
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Radiation Intensity
It is denoted by U.
Pn () = =
Where S is pointing vector
U is radiation intensity
The S & U depend on the distance from the antenna (assume
that we are in far field of the antenna).
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Antenna Apertures
apertures is of two types
The
Ae = =
= 0.0796.
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Antenna Resolution
The most common resolution criterion states that the resolution capability of an
antenna to distinguish between two sources is equal to half the first-null beam
width (FNBW/2),which is usually used to approximate the HPBW.
That is, two sources separated by angular distances equal or greater than FNBW/2
HPBW of an antenna with a uniform distribution can be resolved.
If the separation is smaller, then the antenna will tend to smooth the angular
separation distance.
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Effective height
V= h E.
h= (m).
he = z =
(m).
where
= effective height, m
= physical height, m
= average current, A
.
Where is intrinsic impedance of space.
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Field Zones
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Antenna temperature
Antenna noise temperature has contributions from several sources:
1. Galactic radiation
2. Earth heating
3. The sun
4. Electrical devices
5. The antenna itself
. Galactic noise is high below 1000 MHz. At around 150 MHz, it is
approximately 1000K. At 2500 MHz, it has levelled off to around 10K.
. Earth has an accepted standard temperature of 290K.
. The level of the sun's contribution depends on the solar flux. It is given
by
. whereis the solar flux,is the wavelength, andis the gain of
the antenna in decibels.
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Beam area
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Beam efficiency
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