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Re: Topband: Near Field/Far Field

To: <topband@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: Topband: Near Field/Far Field
From: "Richard Fry" <rfry@adams.net>
Reply-to: Richard Fry <rfry@adams.net>
Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2012 06:27:45 -0500
List-post: <topband@contesting.com">mailto:topband@contesting.com>
Guy Olinger wrote:
We will run NEC4 near field calculations on a 1/4 wave radiator with 120 buried 0.4 wavelength radials at 1.825 MHz, soil char of (5, .13). Even at 30 (thirty) km the depth of the notch near ground is still increasing. ... At 50 km out the minimum at 100m height is -28.69 dB below the max value at 17 km height, with the pattern of values up to elevation 50 km looking very much like the familiar FAR field process pattern plot which coincidentally has a value of -28.93 dB below max at 0.2 degrees elevation. ... If given enough room to work, the NEAR field generation will show the same notch. The problem all along has been 3 km is nowhere near far enough away to complete whatever accounts for the notching.

There is little point in dissecting the far field tens of kilometers from a vertical monopole to find the field remaining there at low elevation angles, because that does not account for ALL of the fields radiated by the monopole. In fact, that approach misses the existence of the greatest contributor to low-angle radiation -- the fields of the elevation pattern within 1 km of a 160m monopole radiator.

The reality being overlooked is that radiation already has been launched from a 1/4WL monopole toward an elevation angle of 0.2 degrees from the fields that are present within the first kilometer of the monopole site. This is shown in the plot at http://i62.photobucket.com/albums/h85/rfry-100/160m_Monopole_ElPat_at_1km.jpg .

Note in this plot that the field at 0.2-degree elevation is greater than the field at the peak of the assumed "take-off angle" lobe commonly attributed to a NEC far-field plot. That low-angle radiation from a monopole existing within 1 km of the site proceeds to the ionosphere, and on 160m is capable of providing skywave service whose first hop return to the earth can provide the greatest range.

Far field is the point of increasing distance where the shape of a pattern calculated by a near field process quits changing at elevations and azimuths of concern.

This belief includes the effects of the propagation path, whereas the classic definition in antenna engineering texts considers only the fields radiated by the antenna, itself. The distance to the near-field/far-field boundary for the antenna alone is, by textbook definition (e.g. John Kraus' ANTENNAS, 3rd edition, page 39): 2L^2/lambda, where L is the greatest physical dimension of the antenna.

Here is a link with more detail: http://www.phys.hawaii.edu/~anita/web/paperwork/currently%20organizing/Military%20EW%20%20Handbook%20Excerpt/antnrfld.pdf
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