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MarkWW
Do receivers only receive signals or they emit emf?
MarkWW said:Do receivers only receive signals or they emit emf?
A receiving antenna re-radiates half the power by the way.MarkWW said:Thanks a lot!
tech99 said:A receiving antenna re-radiates half the power by the way.
Radio Engineers Handbook, by Terman, page 786.davenn said:well, I have never heard that before !
you have a good link or 2 to support that ?
Very interesting, and good to know. Does it apply to parabolic antennas too, or just open antennas?tech99 said:Radio Engineers Handbook, by Terman, page 786.
The induced current flows in the load resistance and the radiation resistance in series, so only half the power is delivered to the load. The I^2 R loss in the radiation resistance occurs because power is re-radiated.
If there is a matched transmission line between an antenna and a receiver, there should be no energy reflected by the receiver back up the transmission line towards the antenna.tech99 said:A receiving antenna re-radiates half the power by the way.
tech99 said:Radio Engineers Handbook, by Terman, page 786.
The induced current flows in the load resistance and the radiation resistance in series, so only half the power is delivered to the load. The I^2 R loss in the radiation resistance occurs because power is re-radiated.
@Baluncore , that's what I would have expected as wellBaluncore said:If there is a matched transmission line between an antenna and a receiver, there should be no energy reflected by the receiver back up the transmission line towards the antenna.
Likewise, a good antenna is a perfect matching network between the impedance of free space and the impedance of the transmission line, if matched it should not reflect energy.
Terman bases his analysis on the voltage induced in the antenna that causes a current to flow. The situation is now modeled as a current induced in the antenna elements and ignores voltage differences. That gets around the confusion of summing currents generated by voltages on elements with variable impedance.davenn said:I wonder if the quote tech99 has stated is taken out of context ?
ThanksBaluncore said:Terman bases his analysis on the voltage induced in the antenna that causes a current to flow. The situation is now modeled as a current induced in the antenna elements and ignores voltage differences. That gets around the confusion of summing currents generated by voltages on elements with variable impedance.
Terman appears to have messed up the bottom of his equation (11) on page 786.
The proportion of the energy received then incorrectly becomes; RL / ( RL + Rr + Rl ).
But the radiation resistance Rr is not a real resistance and should not be added to the load resistance RL and the loss resistance Rl. That may be why it seems the proportion approaches 50% for low loss antennas. Removal of Rr from the equation fixes the problem and returns the proportion to 100%.
Terman then states that a reradiation takes place. I believe he is referring to a minor reradiation due only to the loss resistance Rl. The reradiation should not include Rr.
When this reradiation is conflated with the incorrect 50%, it sugests 50% reflected.
Terman does not write anything like “half the received energy is reflected”. That is a misrepresentation of his text.
I don't have time now for a proper analysis, that will have to wait.
tech99 said:The reflection occurs at the junction of the line and the antenna, and depends on the impedance presented by the line to the antenna, and it is at this point that up to 50% power transfer occurs.
tech99 said:Regarding a parabolic dish, I made one test over an actual 25 mile microwave path where it seemed to be reflecting a lot of power, maybe half as expected.
tech99 said:Regarding Terman's formula, I would suggest that Rr is a real resistance.
Terman said:Radiation Resistance.—The radiation resistance referred to a certain point in an antenna system is the resistance which, if inserted at that point with the assumed current I0 flowing, would dissipate the same energy as is actually radiated from the antenna system. Thus
Radiation resistance = radiated power / I02
Although this radiation resistance is a purely fictitious quantity, the antenna acts as though such a resistance were present, because the loss of energy by radiation is equivalent to a like amount of energy dissipated in a resistance.
(a) If we connect some sort of load to a receiving antenna, it seems logical that the antenna must have a source resistance of some sort, as do all generators. If this were not the case, it would be possible to draw unlimited power from it.davenn said:ONLY if there is a mismatch ( as @Baluncore pointed out)
without actual figures, that is meaningless
However logical it may seem to you, conservation of energy precludes that possibility. You are making an assumption that there is an infinite amount of incident energy available. You are also confusing a fixed voltage source having a fixed internal resistance, with a fixed impedance power source.tech99 said:(a) If we connect some sort of load to a receiving antenna, it seems logical that the antenna must have a source resistance of some sort, as do all generators. If this were not the case, it would be possible to draw unlimited power from it.
So to take an example, are you saying that if Zo is 35 Ohms and the input resistance of the receiver is also 35 Ohms, the efficiency of the antenna is 35/(35+35) = 0.5 or 50%? That seems to be the same number that I am suggesting. Except that I do not see a requirement to have the complication of a feeder in our discussion, as we can place the receiver right at the antenna terminals.Baluncore said:When operated as a receive antenna, the incident EM energy arrives with an E/H ratio of Zfs. The antenna transforms that into a signal in the feedline with a V / I ratio of feedline impedance, Zo. The efficiency of the receive antenna is then about Zo / ( Zo + Rl ).
No. Removal of the line confuses the forward and reflected signals on the line which makes anything possible. The feedline is there, matched at both ends, to move the load away from the antenna in space and time. It conceptually separates the two ends of the problem. It is failure to do that that confused Terman.tech99 said:It would be better for the purposes of analysing this problem to consider the receiver to be located at the antenna terminals and not to have a feeder involved.
No. Conceptually, a transmit antenna has a radiation resistance, a receive antenna does not. A receive antenna hopefully transforms the intrinsic impedance of free space into the 50 ohm characteristic impedance of the line and load.tech99 said:Suppose I have an antenna that has a radiation resistance, referred to its terminals, of 50 Ohms. Are you supposing that it behaves differently to a signal generator with a 50 Ohm output when we connect it to a receiver?
You are confusing internal series loss resistance with signal output impedance. A simple low power signal generator will probably have a low impedance voltage follower or buffer, with a 50 ohm series terminating resistor to the output. Then yes, the voltage will drop to 50% when connected to a 50 ohm load. To compensate for that, the buffer will have a voltage gain of two. Radio transmitters obviously do not have internal 50 ohm resistors wired in series with their outputs when driving 50 ohm lines and loads. Instead, transmitters produce voltage and current in the correct ratio to fit the line and load impedance.tech99 said:For the signal generator, the voltage falls by half when we connect it to the receiver. The efficiency of the system is 50%.
Krause ends section 2:14 with the statement; “Although the above discussion of scattering aperture is applicable to a single dipole (λ/2 or shorter), it does not apply in general.”tech99 said:I have just noticed another good description given in Antennas (second edition) by John D Kraus, page 31 section 2.14. He explains at length the absorption of energy by dipoles and apertures, including the 377 Ohm absorbing paint, ...
Kraus does not confirm that a paraboloid will reflect half the incident energy.tech99 said:… and seems to confirm that a paraboloid will reflect half the energy.
While that is certainly an interesting idea, a conductive screen reflector could make the same shadow. When a signal is canceled by having the reverse phase signal added, that simple cancellation would appear to annihilate two sources of energy, so it must be impossible. There must be other directional effects that conserve energy.Kraus said:The re-radiated or scattered field of an absorbing antenna may be considered as interfering with the incident field so that a shadow may be cast behind the antenna …
What is the precise hypothesis you want to test ?berkeman said:Are you guys really going to make me go test this? I'm kinda busy right now at work...
Thanks for the wonderful reminder.Baluncore said:There is a small amount of EM energy radiated from radio receivers. It usually originates from the first local oscillator, then escapes from the receiver along the the power supply lines, the audio output, or back out through the antenna cable.
During WWII, the 1st LO radiation from the Metox radar warning receivers used on U-boats could be detected and used to find the U-boat. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metox_radar_detector
In Britain the radiation from TV receivers was once used to detect the presence of television sets as part of the license enforcement.
Masthead amplifiers used on TV antennas sometimes oscillate and so block reception for others in the vicinity. I think they are banned in some countries because of that common nuisance radiation.
It seems there is a disagreement whether there is a reflection off of a receiving (dipole or monopole) antenna when an EM wave passes by. Both arguments seem plausible about whether there is a reflection or not, and it is pretty straightforward to test. If there is a reflection, then as an EM wave (at their resonant frequency) passes by two antennas, you will be able to adjust their spacing to get a moderate null in the magnitude of the Rx signal. If there is no reflection, there will be no multipath null that can be found.Baluncore said:What is the precise hypothesis you want to test ?
Can the principle of reciprocity be trumped by one member's belief ?
When you transmit, does half the power come back down the matched feedline ?
Yeah, I think we would all agree on what happens with unterminated or shorted antenna elements.jim hardy said:The directors and reflectors surely reradiate but then they're unterminated.
I think we can stay with simple dipoles and monopoles for now -- that makes it easier to test or simulate.jim hardy said:Does the discussion need to distinguish single versus multi element antennas ?
Yes. A single dipole or a scattering aperture only get one chance to trap the passing energy. By adding a reflector and or directors the effective aperture increases along with the gain. That is why we do not use simple dipole antennas except for very long wavelengths.jim hardy said:Does the discussion need to distinguish single versus multi element antennas ?