When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Rhombic antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhombic_antenna

    Small rhombic UHF television antenna from 1952. Its broad bandwidth allowed it to cover the 470 to 890 MHz UHF television band. A rhombic antenna is made of four sections of wire suspended parallel to the ground in a diamond or "rhombus" shape. Each of the four sides is the same length – about a quarter-wavelength to one wavelength per ...

  3. File:Rhombic antenna diagram.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Rhombic_antenna...

    The antenna consists of a wire suspended above the ground in the shape of a rhombus, terminated at one end by a resistor equal the the wire's characteristic impedance, about 400 to 600 ohms, and at the other end connected to the feedline to the receiver. The rhombic is a travelling wave antenna, Each segment of the rhombus has a radiation ...

  4. Antenna types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antenna_types

    the upper half of a vertical full-wavelength loop antenna mounted on the ground (not to be confused with the visually similar but electrically different half-square antenna described below, under array antennas, [t] nor to be confused with the halo antenna, described next). The full loop is cut at two opposite points along its perimeter, and ...

  5. Radiation pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiation_pattern

    The radiation patterns of a vertical half-wave dipole, an omnidirectional antenna. The horizontal and vertical polar patterns are projections of the 3 dimensional pattern onto horizontal and vertical planes, respectively. An omnidirectional antenna radiates equal signal strength in all horizontal directions, so its horizontal pattern is just a ...

  6. Vertical and horizontal (radio propagation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vertical_and_horizontal...

    The vertical plane is used to plot an antenna's relative field strength perpendicular to the ground (which directly affects a station's coverage area) on a polar graph. Normally, the maximum of 1.000 or 0 dB is at the side (unless there is beam tilt ), which is labeled 0°, to 90° at the top and −90° at the bottom.

  7. Beverage antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beverage_antenna

    The antenna's main lobe, its direction of greatest sensitivity, is to the right, off the end of the wire that is terminated in the resistor. The Beverage antenna consists of a horizontal wire one-half to several wavelengths long, suspended close to the ground, usually 3 to 6 m (10 to 20 feet) high, pointed in the direction of the signal source.

  8. Halo antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halo_antenna

    The thick, black, vertical line is the feed cable, ending in a small black box that contains a trimmer capacitor that with the gamma arm length, impedance matches the antenna feedpoint. A halo antenna , or halo , is a center-fed ⁠ 1 / 2 ⁠ wavelength dipole antenna , which has been bent into a circle, with a break directly opposite the feed ...

  9. Curtain array - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curtain_array

    Curtain arrays were originally developed during the 1920s and 1930s when there was a lot of experimentation with long distance shortwave broadcasting. The underlying concept was to achieve improvements in gain and/or directionality over the simple dipole antenna, possibly by folding one or more dipoles into a smaller physical space, or to arrange multiple dipoles such that their radiation ...