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Reflection, Refraction, and Diffraction

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Angle of incidence equals angle of reflection with both angles measured from a ... ( skip zone) Skip zone. Line of Sight Propagation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reflection, Refraction, and Diffraction


1
Reflection, Refraction, and Diffraction
  • Observe specular reflection
  • Angle of incidence equals angle of reflection
    with both angles measured from a line normal to
    the reflective surface.
  • Corner Reflectors
  • Parabolic principle of collimation
  • Diffuse reflection collective orientation is
    different therefore SCATTERING results.

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Refraction
  • When there is a transition from one medium to
    another.
  • In optics defined by Snells law.
  • When wave enters a region with a higher
    dielectric constant ( a lower propagation
    velocity) it bends toward the normal.
  • Critical angle. (large incident angle wave
    travels to area of low dielectric constant.
    Extreme case is total internal reflection)
  • An application example of total internal
    reflection is optical fibre.( core and cladding)

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Refraction
Can be used to determine angles of incident and
refraction rays.
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Total internal reflection occurs in optcal
fibres. Light reflects from the boundary between
the core of the fibre and a cladding.
Cladding n2
core
Cladding n2
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Diffraction
  • Light appears to go around corners periodically.
  • Radio waves as well.
  • Assume that each point on a wavefront presents
    itself as an isotropic source.
  • Some wavefronts pass beside or above the
    obstruction and radiate in the area beyond.
  • Diffraction more pronounced when dimensions of
    obstruction are small compared to wavelength.

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Terrestrial Propagation
  • Ground-Wave propagation
  • Ionospheric propagation
  • Line of sight.
  • Tropospheric Scatter
  • Tropospheric Ducting

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Ground Waves
  • Frequencies up to 2 Mhz.
  • Vertically polarized in order to minimize
    currents induced in the ground creating losses.
  • Further from transmitter the more horizontal the
    wavefront becomes.
  • Ground waves attenuate quickly above 2 Mhz.
  • Users Military (15 Khz and 60 Khz)
  • Loran (100 Khz)
  • AM broadcast.

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Ionospheric Propagation
  • Three main regions d, E, anf F layers(F1 and F2)
  • Ionization increases with altitude and is greater
    during the day.
  • D and E layers diminish at night.
  • Follows 11 year sunspot cycle.
  • Signal returns by a form of refraction.
  • D and E layers absorb low frequencies( 8-10Mhz)
    during the day therefore low frequencies
    propagate better at night.

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Ionospheric Propagation Contnd.
  • Frequency Diversity - transmit on multiple
    frequencies over HF band.
  • Ionospheric sounding - determines Critical
    Frequency.
  • MUF - maximum usable frequency. The highest
    frequency that returns to earth for a given path.
  • OWF - Optimum usable frequency. ( 0.85 MUF)

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Skip zone
As the angle of elevation increases the distance
covered decreases and MUF becomes lower. For
frequencies above fc there will be a region close
to the transmitter that will not receive the
signal. (skip zone)
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Line of Sight Propagation
  • VHF signals and higher are not normally returned
    to eath by ionosphere.
  • Space wave, line of sight, and tropospheric
    propagation are all the same.
  • For terrestrial application distance is limited
    by the curvature of the earth.
  • Height of TX and RX antennas above terrain is
    important in the calculation of distance.
  • Subject to signal reflections from the terrain.

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Line of Sight Propagation contd.
  • Line of Sight propagation is subject to
    reflections.
  • Waves will either be constructive or
    deconstructive.
  • Especially a concern where surfaces are flat. If
    signals are 180 degrees out of phase the
    reduction in signal strength is quite high ( 20dB
    or more).
  • This contributes to Fading.
  • Remedies 1. Locating antennas in order that
    reflections are diffuse in
  • nature.
  • 2. Frequency Diversity
  • 3. Spatial Diversity

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Antenna Heights for LOS
  • With Sky wave propagation antenna height is only
    important with regards to the impact of
    reflections on radiation patterns.
  • With Space wave propagation antenna elevation is
    important with the higher the better realization.

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Troposcatter 80 to 800 km 250 Mhz to 5 Ghz
Irregularities in the troposphere can cause radio
waves to scatter. Possible causes are water vapor
and temperature variations. Although it is used
as a mechanism for communication systems, the
equipment demands make it inefficient. For
example high power TX,high gain antennas and
sensitive receivers.
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Superrefractive Layers
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