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Home > Antenna (radio)


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A yagi antenna

Most simply, an antenna is an electronic component designed to send or receive radio waves.

More specifically, an antenna is an arrangement of conductors designed to radiate (transmit) an electromagnetic field in response to an applied alternating electromotive force (EMF) and the associated alternating electric current.

Alternatively, if an antenna is placed into an electromagnetic field, it will produce an alternating voltage (receive) in response to the field. See radio frequency induction.

1 Overview

There are two fundamental types of antennas. The first couples to the electric field of an electromagnetic wave. It's usually a length of wire in which an electric charge moves back and forth. The second couples to the magnetic field of an electromagnetic wave. It is usually a coil or loop of wire forming an electromagnet.

By adding additional conducting rods or coils (called elements) and varying their length, spacing and orientation, an antenna with specific desired properties can be created, such as a Yagi antenna. Typically, antennas are designed to operate in a relatively narrow frequency range. The design criteria for receiving and transmitting antennas differ slightly, but generally an antenna can receive and transmit equally as well. This property is called reciprocity.

The vast majority of antennas are simple vertical rods a quarter of a wavelength long. Such antennas are simple in construction, usually inexpensive, and both radiate in and receive from all horizontal directions (omnidirectional). One limitation of this antenna is that it does not radiate or receive in the direction in which the rod points. This region is called the antenna blind cone or null.

Antennas have practical use for the transmissionIn communications and information processing, a transmitter (sometimes abbreviated XMTR) is an object ( source) which sends information to an observer ( receiver). Crystal Palace transmitter, London A transmitter is an electronic device which with the aid and receptionThe word receiver has a number of different meanings: In communications and information processing, a receiver is the recipient ( observer) of a message ( information), which is sent from a source ( object). Receivers decode messages. A receiver (radio) i of radio frequencyRF can also denote rheumatoid factor Radio frequency or RF refers to that portion of the electromagnetic spectrum in which electromagnetic waves can be generated by alternating current fed to an antenna. Such frequencies account for the following parts of signals (radio, TV, etc.) which can pass through (nonconducting) walls at the speed of lightCherenkov effect in a "swimming pool" nuclear reactor. The effect is due to electrons moving faster than the speed at which light moves in water. The speed of light (denoted as c reputedly from the Latin celeritas "speed", and also known as Einstein's con over great distances.

2 Antenna Effectiveness

There are several critical parameters that affect an antenna's performance and can be adjusted during the design process. These are resonant frequency, impedanceIn electrical engineering, impedance is a measure for the manner and degree a component resists the flow of electrical current if a given voltage is applied. It is denoted by the symbol Z and is measured in ohms. Impedance differs from simple resistance i, gainElectronics In electronics, gain is the logarithm (base 10) of the ratio of signal output from a system to signal input to the system. A signal is usually measured in units of voltage or power gain. An audio amplifier changing the 1 volt at the input to 1, apertureAperture an opening. from the Latin apere to open. Photography The aperture defines the size of the opening in the lens, which in advanced cameras can be adjusted to control the amount of light reaching the film or digital sensor ( CCD or CMOS). In combin or radiation pattern, polarization, efficiency and bandwidth. Transmit antennas may also have a maximum power rating, and receive antennas differ in their noise rejection properties.



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