Antenna and Propagation: by Waheed Ur Rehman
Antenna and Propagation: by Waheed Ur Rehman
By
Waheed ur Rehman
[email protected]
Antenna
• Electrical conductor for conduction
electromagnetic energy
• Electric energy < -- > electromagnetic
energy
• Antenna characteristics are essentially the
same whether an antenna is sending or
receiving electromagnetic energy.
Radiation pattern
• A common way to characterize the
performance of an antenna
• Graphical representation of the radiation
properties of an antenna
• The simplest pattern is produced by an
idealized antenna known as isotropic
antenna (sphere with an antenna in
center)
Radiation pattern
Isotropic Antenna
• Isotropic Antenna is a point in space that
radiate power in all directions equally
noise
Amplifiers that
– Attenuation is greater at higher frequencies,
amplify higher
causing distortion. frequency more
Than lower
frequency
Free Space Loss
• Signal disperses with distance
• Signal spreads larger over distances
• This type of attenuation is called free
space loss
• In ideal free space propagation
– Pr = Pt Gt Gr (lamda/4 х pi х d) 2
• For microwave systems
• Ls = 32.45 +20log d(km) + 20 log f (MHz)
Noise
• Unwanted signal created from the source
other than the transmitter
• Four categories
– Thermal noise
– Intermodulation noise
– Cross talk
– Impulsive noise
Noise
Thermal Noise
• Due to thermal agitation of electrons
• Always present and cannot be eliminated
• Uniformly distributed across the frequency spectrum
hence referred to as white noise
• Independent of frequency
• Thermal noise in watts present in a bandwidth of B Hertz
can be expressed as
N = kTB where k = boltzmann’s constt
1.38 х 10-23 J/K
T is Temp, in Kelvin
• Or in decibels-watt
– N = 10 log k + 10log T + 10 log B
Noise
Intermodulation Noise