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  2. Dipole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dipole

    A simple example of this system is a pair of charges of equal magnitude but opposite sign separated by some typically small distance. (A permanent electric dipole is called an electret.) A magnetic dipole is the closed circulation of an electric current system. A simple example is a single loop of wire with constant current through it.

  3. Dipole antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dipole_antenna

    A common example of a dipole is the rabbit ears television antenna found on broadcast television sets. All dipoles are electrically equivalent to two monopoles mounted end-to-end and fed with opposite phases, with the ground plane between them made virtual by the opposing monopole.

  4. Chemical polarity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_polarity

    For example, the water molecule (H 2 O) contains two polar O−H bonds in a bent (nonlinear) geometry. The bond dipole moments do not cancel, so that the molecule forms a molecular dipole with its negative pole at the oxygen and its positive pole midway between the two hydrogen atoms. In the figure each bond joins the central O atom with a ...

  5. Force between magnets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Force_between_magnets

    For example, the direction of the magnetic moment of a bar magnet, such as the one in a compass is the direction that the north poles points toward. In the physically correct Ampèrian loop model, magnetic dipole moments are due to infinitesimally small loops of current.

  6. Antenna types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antenna_types

    Both dipoles and monopoles are often built large enough to be self-resonant; usually each arm is a quarter-wave long. However a few types of linear antennas are specifically made too small to resonate – short whip antennas, and unplanned random wire antennas, for example. Loop antennas ("magnetic" antennas) [b]

  7. Electric dipole moment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_dipole_moment

    By truncating this expansion (for example, retaining only the dipole terms, or only the dipole and quadrupole terms, or etc.), the results of the previous section are regained. In particular, truncating the expansion at the dipole term, the result is indistinguishable from the polarization density generated by a uniform dipole moment confined ...

  8. Radiation pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiation_pattern

    Furthermore, the constant of proportionality is the same irrespective of the nature of the antenna, and so must be the same for all antennas. Analysis of a particular antenna (such as a Hertzian dipole), shows that this constant is , where is the free-space wavelength. Hence, for any antenna the gain and the effective aperture are related by

  9. Log-periodic antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log-periodic_antenna

    The most common form of log-periodic antenna is the log-periodic dipole array or LPDA, The LPDA consists of a number of half-wave dipole driven elements of gradually increasing length, each consisting of a pair of metal rods. The dipoles are mounted close together in a line, connected in parallel to the feedline with alternating phase.