Title: Antennas and Propagation Review/Recap
1Antennas and PropagationReview/Recap
2Overview
- Antenna Functions
- Isotropic Antenna
- Radiation Pattern
- Parabolic Reflective Antenna
- Antenna Gain
- Signal Loss in Satellite Communication
- Noise Types
- Refraction
- Fading
- Diffraction and Scattering
- Fast and Slow Fading
- Flat and Selective Fading
- Diversity Techniques
3Review Question Antenna Functionality
- Q- What two functions are performed by an
antenna?
4Antenna Definition
- An antenna is defined as usually a metallic
device (as a rod or wire) for radiating or
receiving radio waves. - The IEEE Standard Definitions of Antenna defines
the antenna or aerial as a means for radiating
or receiving radio waves. In other words the
antenna is the transitional structure between
free-space and a guiding device, as shown in
Figure
5Why Antennas of Different Shapes
- In addition to receiving or transmitting energy,
an antenna in an advanced wireless system is
usually required to optimize or accentuate the
radiation energy in some directions and suppress
it in others. - Thus the antenna must also serve as a directional
device in addition to a probing device. - It must then take various forms to meet the
particular need at hand, and it may be a piece of
conducting wire, an aperture, a patch, an
assembly of elements (array), a reflector, a
lens, and so forth. - For wireless communication systems, the antenna
is one of the most critical components. A good
design of the antenna can relax system
requirements and improve overall system
performance. - The antenna serves to a communication system the
same purpose that eyes and eyeglasses serve to a
human
6Basic Antenna Functions
- As Antenna resides between cable/waveguide and
the medium air, the main function of antenna is
to match impedance of the medium with the
cable/waveguide impedance. Hence antenna is
impedance transforming device. - The second and most important function of antenna
is to radiate the energy in the desired direction
and suppress in the unwanted direction. This
basically is the radiation pattern of the
antenna. This radiation pattern is different for
different types of antennas.
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8The Role of Antennas
- Antennas serve four primary functions
- Spatial filter
- directionally-dependent sensitivity
- Polarization filter
- polarization-dependent sensitivity
- Impedance transformer
- transition between free space and transmission
line - Propagation mode adapter
- from free-space fields to guided waves
- (e.g., transmission line, waveguide)
9Spatial filter
- Antennas have the property of being more
sensitive in one direction than in another which
provides the ability to spatially filter signals
from its environment.
Radiation pattern of directive antenna.
Directive antenna.
10Polarization filter
Antennas have the property of being more
sensitive to one polarization than another which
provides the ability to filter signals based on
its polarization.
In this example, h is the antennas effective
height whose units are expressed in meters.
11Impedance transformer
- Intrinsic impedance of free-space, E/H
- Characteristic impedance of transmission line,
V/I - A typical value for Z0 is 50 ?.
- Clearly there is an impedance mismatch that must
be addressed by the antenna.
12Propagation Mode Adapter
- In free space the waves spherically expand
following Huygens principle each point of an
advancing wave front is in fact the center of a
fresh disturbance and the source of a new train
of waves. - Within the sensor, the waves are guided within a
transmission line or waveguide that restricts
propagation to one axis.
13Propagation Mode Adapter
- During both transmission and receive operations
the antenna must provide the transition between
these two propagation modes.
14Antenna purpose
- Transformation of a guided EM wave in
transmission line (waveguide) into a freely
propagating EM wave in space (or vice versa) with
specified directional characteristics - Transformation from time-function in
one-dimensional space into time-function in three
dimensional space - The specific form of the radiated wave is defined
by the antenna structure and the environment
Space wave
Guided wave
15Antenna functions
- Transmission line
- Power transport medium - must avoid power
reflections, otherwise use matching devices - Radiator
- Must radiate efficiently must be of a size
comparable with the half-wavelength - Resonator
- Unavoidable - for broadband applications
resonances must be attenuated
16Review Question Antenna Functionality
Q- What two functions are performed by an
antenna?
- Ans- Two functions of an antenna are
- For transmission of a signal, radio frequency
electrical energy from the transmitter is
converted into electromagnetic energy by the
antenna and radiated into the surrounding
environment (atmosphere, space, water) - For reception of a signal, electromagnetic energy
impinging on the antenna is converted into
radio-frequency electrical energy and fed into
the receiver.
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18Isotropic Antenna
- Q- What is an isotropic antenna?
19Isotropic Antenna
- Isotropic antenna or isotropic radiator is a
hypothetical (not physically realizable) concept,
used as a useful reference to describe real
antennas. - Isotropic antenna radiates equally in all
directions. - Its radiation pattern is represented by a sphere
whose center coincides with the location of the
isotropic radiator.
20Reference Antenna for Gain
- Gain is Measured Specific to a Reference Antenna
- isotropic antenna often used - gain over
isotropic - Isotropic antenna radiates power ideally in all
directions - Gain measured in dBi
- Test antennas field strength relative to
reference isotropic antenna at same power,
distance, and angle - -Isotropic antenna cannot be practically realized
- e.g.
- A lamp is similar to an isotropic antenna
21Isotropic
22An Isotropic Source Gain
- Every real antenna radiates more energy in some
directions than in others (i.e. has directional
properties) - Idealized example of directional antenna the
radiated energy is concentrated in the yellow
region (cone). - Directive antenna gain the power flux density is
increased by (roughly) the inverse ratio of the
yellow area and the total surface of the
isotropic sphere - Gain in the field intensity may also be
considered - it is equal to the square root of
the power gain.
23Antenna Gain Measurement
Antenna Gain (P/Po) SS0
24Isotropic Antenna
- Q- What is an isotropic antenna?
- Ans- An isotropic antenna is a point in space
that radiates power in all directions equally.
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26Review Radiation Pattern
- Q- What information is available from a
radiation pattern?
27Radiation 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. - Particularly in the fields of fiber optics,
lasers, and integrated optics, the term radiation
pattern may also be used as a synonym for the
near-field pattern or Fresnel pattern. This
refers to the positional dependence of the
electromagnetic field in the near-field, or
Fresnel region of the source. The near-field
pattern is most commonly defined over a plane
placed in front of the source, or over a
cylindrical or spherical surface enclosing it. - The far-field pattern of an antenna may be
determined experimentally at an antenna range, or
alternatively, the near-field pattern may be
found using a near-field scanner, and the
radiation pattern deduced from it by computation.
The far-field radiation pattern can also be
calculated from the antenna shape by computer
programs such as NEC. Other software, like HFSS
can also compute the near field.
28Antenna Radiation Pattern
- Radiation pattern
- Graphical representation of radiation properties
of an antenna - Depicted as two-dimensional cross section
- The radiation pattern of an antenna is a plot of
the far-field radiation from the antenna. More
specifically, it is a plot of the power radiated
from an antenna per unit solid angle, or its
radiation intensity U watts per unit solid
angle. This is arrived at by simply multiplying
the power density at a given distance by the
square of the distance r, where the power density
S watts per square metre is given by the
magnitude of the time-averaged Poynting vector - Ur²S
29Radiation pattern
- The radiation pattern of antenna is a
representation (pictorial or mathematical) of the
distribution of the power out-flowing (radiated)
from the antenna (in the case of transmitting
antenna), or inflowing (received) to the antenna
(in the case of receiving antenna) as a function
of direction angles from the antenna - Antenna radiation pattern (antenna pattern)
- is defined for large distances from the antenna,
where the spatial (angular) distribution of the
radiated power does not depend on the distance
from the radiation source - is independent on the power flow direction it is
the same when the antenna is used to transmit and
when it is used to receive radio waves - is usually different for different frequencies
and different polarizations of radio wave
radiated/ received
30Power Pattern Vs. Field pattern
- The power pattern is the measured (calculated)
and plotted received power P(?, ?) at a
constant (large) distance from the antenna - The amplitude field pattern is the measured
(calculated) and plotted electric (magnetic)
field intensity, E(?, ?) or H(?, ?) at a
constant (large) distance from the antenna
- The power pattern and the field patterns are
inter-relatedP(?, ?) (1/?)E(?, ?)2
?H(?, ?)2 - P power
- E electrical field component vector
- H magnetic field component vector
- ? 377 ohm (free-space, plane wave impedance)
31Normalized pattern
- Usually, the pattern describes the normalized
field (power) values with respect to the maximum
value. - Note The power pattern and the amplitude field
pattern are the same when computed and when
plotted in dB.
323-D pattern
- Antenna radiation pattern is 3-dimensional
- The 3-D plot of antenna pattern assumes both
angles ? and ? varying, which is difficult to
produce and to interpret
3-D pattern
332-D pattern
- Usually the antenna pattern is presented as a 2-D
plot, with only one of the direction angles, ? or
? varies - It is an intersection of the 3-D one with a
given plane - usually it is a ? const plane or a ? const
plane that contains the patterns maximum
Two 2-D patterns
34Example a short dipole on z-axis
35Principal Patterns
- Principal patterns are the 2-D patterns of
linearly polarized antennas, measured in 2 planes - the E-plane a plane parallel to the E vector and
containing the direction of maximum radiation,
and - the H-plane a plane parallel to the H vector,
orthogonal to the E-plane, and containing the
direction of maximum radiation
36Example
37Antenna Mask (Example 1)
- Typical relative directivity- mask of receiving
antenna (Yagi ant., TV dcm waves)
38Antenna Mask (Example 2)
0dB
Phi
-3dB
- Reference pattern for co-polar and cross-polar
components for satellite transmitting antennas in
Regions 1 and 3 (Broadcasting 12 GHz)
39Review Radiation Pattern
- Q- What information is available from a
radiation pattern? - Radiation Patterns in Polar and Cartesian
Coordinates Showing Various Types of Lobes - Ans- A radiation pattern is a graphical
representation of the radiation properties of an
antenna as a function of space coordinates.
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41Parabolic Reflective Antenna
- Q- What is the advantage of a parabolic
reflective antenna?
42Two Main Purposes of Antenna
- Impedance matching matches impedance of
transmission line to the intrinsic impedance of
free space to prevent wanted reflection back to
source. - Antenna must be designed to direct the radiation
in the desired direction. - So a parabolic antenna
- is a high gain reflector antenna. It is used for
television, radio and data communications. It may
also be used for radar on the UHF and SHF
sections of the electromagnetic spectrum.
43Reflector Antenna
- Reflector antenna such as parabolic antenna are
composed of primary radiator and a reflective
mirror.
44Parabolic Reflector Antenna
- Any electromagnetic wave incident upon the
paraboloid surface will be directed to the focal
point. - Primary antenna is used at the focal point of the
parabolic reflector antenna instead of isotropic
antenna. The isotropic antenna would radiate and
receive radiation from all directions resulting
in spillover. - Primary antenna should be designed to
illuminate just the reflector uniformly.
45Loss
46Characteristics
- Aperture
- r radius of the diameter
- Larger dish has more gain than smaller
- Clear line of sight is important
47Calculations
- Physical area
- D Diameter
- Effective area
- illumination efficiency
- Wavelength
- Gain
- 3db beamwidth
48Half Power Beamwidth
The half power graph showing the angle between
the half power point on either side of maximum
49Radiation Pattern for Parabolic Antenna
50Advantage of a Parabolic Antenna
- The advantage of a parabolic antenna is that it
can be used as primary mirror for all the
frequencies in the project, provided the surface
is within the tolerance limit only the feed
antenna and the receiver need to be changed when
the observing frequency is changed. - An advantage of such a design is the small
irradiation loss, which allows for an optimum
antenna gain. - It is an advantage of such an arrangement that
the exciter system and/or the exciter 3
are/is protectively located within the parabola
or the parabolic reflector. - Parabolic antenna is the most efficient type of a
directional antenna - large front/back ratio,
sharp radiation angle and small side lobes. It
fits well for noisy locations where other
antennas factually do not work. - The antenna's Gain is adequate to the area of the
reflector. The reflector can be
central-focused(the focus is in the center of the
dish) or offset (the focus is off the axis of the
dish). - In general, they serve for connection of end
users (so-called last mile) to a wireless
network. However, in areas with lower intensity
of Wi-Fi networks, they can be successfully used
also for back-bone links. In fact, this frequency
is used for connections up to maximum 10 km
51Parabolic Reflective Antenna
- Q- What is the advantage of a parabolic
reflective antenna? - A parabolic antenna creates, in theory, a
parallel beam without dispersion. In practice,
there will be some beam spread. Nevertheless, it
produces a highly focused, directional beam.
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53Antenna Gain
- Q- What factors determine antenna gain?
54Antenna Gain
Change in coverage by focusing the area of RF
propagation
- Antenna Gain (Directivity)
- Power output, in a particular direction, compared
to that produced in any direction by a perfect
omnidirectional antenna usual reference is an
isotropic antenna (dBi) but sometimes a simple ½
? antenna is a more practical reference good
sales trick to use an isotropic reference when a
dipole is inferred resulting in a 1.64 power
gain - Antenna gain doesnt increase power only
concentrates effective radiation pattern - Effective area (related to antenna aperture)
Expressed in terms of effective area - Related to physical size and shape of antenna
related to the operational wavelength of the
antenna
55Passive Gain
- Focusing isotropic energy in a specific pattern
- Created by the design of the antenna
- Uses the magnify glass concept
56Passive Gain
- Antennas use passive gain
- Total amount of energy emitted by antenna doesnt
increase only the distribution of energy around
the antenna - Antenna is designed to focus more energy in a
specific direction - Passive gain is always a function of the antenna
(i.e. independent of the components leading up to
the antenna
57Passive Gain
- Advantage
- Does not require external power
- Disadvantage
- As the gain increases, its coverage becomes more
focused - Highest-gain antennas cant be used for mobile
users because of their tight beam
58Active Gain
- Providing an external power source
- Amplifier
- High gain transmitters
- Active gain involves an amplifier
59Antenna Gain
- Relationship between antenna gain and effective
area - G antenna gain
- Ae effective area
- f carrier frequency
- c speed of light ( 3 x 108 m/s)
- ? carrier wavelength
60Antenna gain
- Antenna gain is increased by focusing the antenna
- The antenna does not create energy, so a higher
gain in one direction must mean a lower gain in
another. - Note antenna gain is based on the maximum gain,
not the average over a region. This maximum may
only be achieved only if the antenna is carefully
aimed.
This antenna is narrower and results in 3dB
higher gain than the dipole, hence, 3dBD or
5.14dBi
This antenna is narrower and results in 9dB
higher gain than the dipole, hence, 9dBD or
11.14dBi
61Antenna gain
Instead of the energy going in all horizontal
directions, a reflector can be placed so it only
goes in one direction gt another 3dB of gain,
3dBD or 5.14dBi
Further focusing on a sector results in more
gain. A uniform 3 sector antenna system would
give 4.77 dB more. A 10 degree range 15dB
more. The actual gain is a bit higher since the
peak is higher than the average over the range.
- Mobile phone base stations claim a gain of 18dBi
with three sector antenna system. - 4.77dB from 3 sectors 13.33 dBi
- An 11dBi antenna has a very narrow range.
62Antenna Gain
- The power gain G, or simply the gain, of an
antenna is the ratio of its radiation intensity
to that of an isotropic antenna radiating the
same total power as accepted by the real antenna.
When antenna manufacturers specify simply the
gain of an antenna they are usually referring to
the maximum value of G.
63Antenna gain and effective areas
Type of antenna Effective area Power gain
Isotropic ?2/4? 1
Infinitesimal dipole or loop 1.5?2/4? 1.5
Half-wave dipole 1.64?2/4? 1.64
Horn, mouth area A 0.81A 10A/ ?2
Parabolic, face area A 0.56A 7A/ ?2
turnstile 1.15?2/4? 1.15
64Antenna Gain
- Q- What factors determine antenna gain?
- Ans- Effective area and wavelength
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66Satellite Communication
- Q- What is the primary cause of signal loss in
satellite communications?
67Basics How do Satellites Work
- Two Stations on Earth want to communicate through
radio broadcast but are too far away to use
conventional means. - The two stations can use a satellite as a relay
station for their communication - One Earth Station sends a transmission to the
satellite. This is called a Uplink. - The satellite Transponder converts the signal and
sends it down to the second earth station. This
is called a Downlink.
68Basics Advantages of Satellites
- The advantages of satellite communication over
terrestrial communication are - The coverage area of a satellite greatly exceeds
that of a terrestrial system. - Transmission cost of a satellite is independent
of the distance from the center of the coverage
area. - Satellite to Satellite communication is very
precise. - Higher Bandwidths are available for use.
69Basics Disadvantages of Satellites
- The disadvantages of satellite communication
- Launching satellites into orbit is costly.
- Satellite bandwidth is gradually becoming used
up. - There is a larger propagation delay in satellite
communication than in terrestrial communication.
70Basics Factors in Satellite Communication
- Elevation Angle The angle of the horizontal of
the earth surface to the center line of the
satellite transmission beam. - This effects the satellites coverage area.
Ideally, you want a elevation angle of 0 degrees,
so the transmission beam reaches the horizon
visible to the satellite in all directions. - However, because of environmental factors like
objects blocking the transmission, atmospheric
attenuation, and the earth electrical background
noise, there is a minimum elevation angle of
earth stations.
71Basics Factors in satellite communication .
- Coverage Angle A measure of the portion of the
earth surface visible to a satellite taking the
minimum elevation angle into account. - R/(Rh) sin(p/2 - ß - ?)/sin(? p/2)
- cos(ß ?)/cos(?)
- R 6370 km (earths radius)
- h satellite orbit height
- ß coverage angle
- ? minimum elevation angle
72Basics Factors in satellite communication.
- Other impairments to satellite communication
- The distance between an earth station and a
satellite (free space loss). - Satellite Footprint The satellite
transmissions strength is strongest in the
center of the transmission, and decreases farther
from the center as free space loss increases. - Atmospheric Attenuation caused by air and water
can impair the transmission. It is particularly
bad during rain and fog.
73Atmospheric Losses
- Different types of atmospheric losses can disturb
radio wave transmission in satellite systems - Atmospheric absorption
- Atmospheric attenuation
- Traveling ionospheric disturbances
74Atmospheric Absorption
- Energy absorption by atmospheric gases, which
varies with the frequency of the radio waves. - Two absorption peaks are observed (for 90º
elevation angle) - 22.3 GHz from resonance absorption in water
vapour (H2O) - 60 GHz from resonance absorption in oxygen (O2)
- For other elevation angles
- AA AA90 cosec ?
Source Satellite Communications, Dennis Roddy,
McGraw-Hill
75Atmospheric Attenuation
- Rain is the main cause of atmospheric attenuation
(hail, ice and snow have little effect on
attenuation because of their low water content). - Total attenuation from rain can be determined by
- A ?L dB
- where ? dB/km is called the specific
attenuation, and can be calculated from specific
attenuation coefficients in tabular form that can
be found in a number of publications - where L km is the effective path length of the
signal through the rain note that this differs
from the geometric path length due to
fluctuations in the rain density.
76Traveling Ionospheric Disturbances
- Traveling ionospheric disturbances are clouds of
electrons in the ionosphere that provoke radio
signal fluctuations which can only be determined
on a statistical basis. - The disturbances of major concern are
- Scintillation
- Polarisation rotation.
- Scintillations are variations in the amplitude,
phase, polarisation, or angle of arrival of radio
waves, caused by irregularities in the ionosphere
which change over time. - The main effect of scintillations is fading of
the signal.
77Satellite Communication
- Q- What is the primary cause of signal loss in
satellite communications? - Ans- Free space loss.
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79Impairments
- Q- Name and briefly define four types of noise.
80Transmission Impairments
- Signal received may differ from signal
transmitted causing - Analog - degradation of signal quality
- Digital - bit errors
- Most significant impairments are
- Attenuation and attenuation distortion
- Delay distortion
- Noise
81Noise
- Signal strength falls off with distance over any
transmission medium - Varies with frequency
82Categories of Noise
83Categories of Noise
- Impulse Noise
- caused by external electromagnetic interferences
- noncontinuous, consisting of irregular pulses or
spikes - short duration and high amplitude
- minor annoyance for analog signals but a major
source of error in digital data
- Crosstalk
- a signal from one line is picked up by another
- can occur by electrical coupling between nearby
twisted pairs or when microwave antennas pick up
unwanted signals
84Noise
- Thermal noise due to thermal agitation of
electrons. - Present in all electronic devices and
transmission media. - As a function of temperature.
- Uniformly distributed across the frequency
spectrum, hence often referred as white noise. - Cannot be eliminated places an upper bound on
the communication system performance. - Can cause erroneous to the transmitted digital
data bits.
85Noise Noise on Digital Data
Error in bits
86Thermal Noise
- The noise power density (amount of thermal noise
to be found in a bandwidth of 1Hz in any device
or conductor) is
N0 noise power density in watts per 1 Hz of
bandwidth k Boltzmann's constant 1.3803 ?
10-23 J/K T temperature, in kelvins (absolute
temperature) 0oC 273 Kelvin
87Thermal Noise
- Noise is assumed to be independent of frequency
- Thermal noise present in a bandwidth of B Hertz
(in watts) - or, in decibel-watts (dBW),
88Noise Terminology
- Intermodulation noise occurs if signals with
different frequencies share the same medium - Interference caused by a signal produced at a
frequency that is the sum or difference of
original frequencies - Crosstalk unwanted coupling between signal
paths - Impulse noise irregular pulses or noise spikes
- Short duration and of relatively high amplitude
- Caused by external electromagnetic disturbances,
or faults and flaws in the communications system
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90Impairments
- Q- Name and briefly define four types of noise.
- Ans- Thermal noise is due to thermal agitation
of electrons. Intermodulation noise produces
signals at a frequency that is the sum or
difference of the two original frequencies or
multiples of those frequencies. Crosstalk is the
unwanted coupling between signal paths. Impulse
noise is noncontinuous, consisting of irregular
pulses or noise spikes of short duration and of
relatively high amplitude.
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92Refraction?
93Law of refraction
- A refracted ray lies in the plane of incidence
and has an angle ?2 of refraction that is
related to the angle of incidence ?1 by
the symbols n1 and n2 are dimensionless
constant, called the index of refraction
94Refraction
Refraction occurs when an RF signal changes speed
and is bent while moving between media of
different densities.
95Refraction
96Refraction?
- Q- What is refraction?
- Ans- Refraction is the bending of a radio beam
caused by changes in the speed of propagation at
a point of change in the medium
97Fading
98Fading in a Mobile Environment
- The term fading refers to the time variation of
received signal power caused by changes in the
transmission medium or paths. - Atmospheric condition, such as rainfall
- The relative location of various obstacles
changes over time
99Types of Fading
- Fast fading
- Slow fading
- Flat fading
- Selective fading
- Rayleigh fading
- Rician fading
100Fading in the Mobile Environment
- Fading time variation of received signal power
due to changes in the transmission medium or
path(s) - Kinds of fading
- Fast fading
- Slow fading
- Flat fading ? independent from frequency
- Selective fading ? frequency-dependent
- Rayleigh fading ? no dominant path
- Rician fading ? Line Of Sight (LOS) is dominating
presence of indirect multipath signals
101Fading
- Q- What is fading?
- Ans- The term fading refers to the time
variation of received signal power caused by
changes in the transmission medium or path(s).
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103- Q- What is the difference between diffraction
and scattering?
104Diffraction
Diffraction is a change in the direction and/or
intensity of a wave as it passes by the edge of
an obstacle.
Diffraction occurs because the RF signal slows
down as it encounters the obstacle and causes the
wave front to change directions Diffraction is
often caused by buildings, small hills, and other
larger objects in the path of the propagating RF
signal.
105Diffraction
- Diffraction - occurs at the edge of an
impenetrable body that is large compared to
wavelength of radio wave
106Scattering
Scattering happens when an RF signal strikes an
uneven surface causing the signal to be
scattered. The resulting signals are less
significant than the original signal. Scattering
Multiple Reflections
107Scattering
- Scattering occurs when incoming signal hits an
object whose size in the order of the wavelength
of the signal or less. - Irregular objects such as walls with rough
surfaces,furniture and vehicles and foliage and
the like scatter rays in all the direction in the
form of spherical waves.
108Multipath Propagation
109Diffraction and Scattering
- Q- What is the difference between diffraction
and scattering? - Ans- Diffraction occurs at the edge of an
impenetrable body that is large compared to the
wavelength of the radio wave. The edge in effect
become a source and waves radiate in different
directions from the edge, allowing a beam to bend
around an obstacle. If the size of an obstacle is
on the order of the wavelength of the signal or
less, scattering occurs. An incoming signal is
scattered into several weaker outgoing signals in
unpredictable directions
110Summary
- Antenna Functions
- Isotropic Antenna
- Radiation Pattern
- Parabolic Reflective Antenna
- Antenna Gain
- Signal Loss in Satellite Communication
- Noise Types
- Refraction
- Fading
- Diffraction and Scattering
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112- Complimentary Session for Antennas and
Propagation - (Lecture 17)
113Antenna Gain (Q)
Where
Sol
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115Q
- Q- For each of the antenna types listed in Table
above , what is the effective area and gain at a
wavelength of 30 mm? Repeat for a wavelength of 3
mm. Assume that the actual area for the horn and
parabolic antennas is m2 .
116Antenna Gain
Where
117Ans
- Q- For each of the antenna types listed in Table
above , what is the effective area and gain at a
wavelength of 30 mm? Repeat for a wavelength of 3
mm. Assume that the actual area for the horn and
parabolic antennas is m2 .
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119Q
Solution
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121Q
Question
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123Thermal Noise
Where
Question-
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125The Expression Eb /N0
Question-
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127- Q- It is often more convenient to express
distance in km rather than m and frequency in MHz
rather than Hz. Rewrite Equation using these
dimensions. - Solution- The equations from Text Book are
- Solution-
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129Q
- Q- Suppose a transmitter produces 50 W of power.
- Express the transmit power in units of dBm and
dBW. - If the transmitter's power is applied to a unity
gain antenna with a 900-MHz carrier frequency,
what is the received power in dBm at a free space
distance of 100 m? - Repeat (b) for a distance of 10 km.
- Repeat (c) but assume a receiver antenna gain of
2.
130Q/A
- Q- Suppose a transmitter produces 50 W of power.
- Express the transmit power in units of dBm and
dBW. - If the transmitter's power is applied to a unity
gain antenna with a 900-MHz carrier frequency,
what is the received power in dBm at a free space
distance of 100 m? - Repeat (b) for a distance of 10 km.
- Repeat (c) but assume a receiver antenna gain of
2.
- .
- b)
- Therefore, received power in dBm 47 71.52
24.52 dBm
131Q/A
- Q- Suppose a transmitter produces 50 W of power.
- Express the transmit power in units of dBm and
dBW. - If the transmitter's power is applied to a unity
gain antenna with a 900-MHz carrier frequency,
what is the received power in dBm at a free space
distance of 100 m? - Repeat (b) for a distance of 10 km.
- Repeat (c) but assume a receiver antenna gain of
2.
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133Free Space Loss
134Free Space Loss
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