Problems Five


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Transmission line notes.

Antennas

An extended version of these problems


Question 9

Define the term "isotropic radiator". A certain transmit antenna has boresight gain which is a factor 2.6 over isotropic. Express this gain as dBi. Note that antenna gain figures can be very confusing. Engineers like to work in dB, which is a logarithmic measure. Adding gains in dB is the same thing as multiplying numerical gain. There is much more insight to be had from thinking about antenna gain as a straight numerical factor. It is said that engineers cannot multiply, only add . . ["the Lord said, be fruitful and multiply, but I'm only an adder...."] so if you see a number for antenna gain quoted without any indication it is quite likely to be the dBi figure rather than the numerical factor by which the radiated power exceeds that of an isotrope. If you get this wrong, the whole caboodle fails. To compound the problem, many engineers use dBd rather than dBi. dBd refers to the gain with respect to a perfect dipole which has numerical gain over isotropic of 1.66, which is 2.2 dBi. Thus to find dBi, take the dBd figure and add 2.2

This transmit antenna is fed with a signal having power 800 Watts. Assuming that there are no scattering obstacles in the beam or the near field, and that there is no attenuation along the path, calculate the power density in watts/square metre, and the rms electric field, at a distance of 25km from the antenna along its boresight.


Question 10.


A receiver is fed by an array antenna. The array consists of a broadside arrangement of 8 identical elements connected with equal weights and the same phases to the receiver. Each element has boresight gain of 6 dBi perpendicular to the plane of the broadside array. The frequency of the link is 200MHz. Calculate the array pattern gain, the total gain, and the effective area of the receive antenna array.

If the transmitting system of Question 9 is pointing at this array from a distance of 100km, calculate the total received signal power.

If the receiver noise power is due to thermal noise in 10MHz bandwidth at a source temperature of 300K, calculate the possible range of the link for the receiver signal to noise ratio to be greater than 10dB. Comment on your result.



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22nd November 2001