Re: NEC-LIST:Proper Antenna Patterns

From: Chuck Counselman <ccc_at_email.domain.hidden>
Date: Thu, 11 Oct 2001 11:42:53 -0400

At 8:36 AM -0500 10/11/01, KLysiak wrote:
>The complex (real and imaginary parts or amplitude and phase) antenna
>patterns for transmit and receive antennas change with termination
>impedance.

If the antenna in question has one single feedpoint, or "port," then
neither the transmit nor the receive pattern of the antenna depends
on the impedance seen by the antenna looking through this port to a
source or load. By this statement I mean that the
_angular_dependence_ of the complex amplitude of the transmitted or
received signal is independent of the source or load impedance. Of
course it remains true that impedance mismatch between the
source/load and the antenna will affect the signal transmitted or
received, but the latter effect is purely multiplicative, and
independent of direction.

Perhaps you are thinking of the problem of an array antenna having a
plurality of feedpoints. In this case the pattern _can_ depend on
how the feedpoints are excited, because the current or voltage at one
feedpoint depends on the the current or voltage at another.

>Normally NEC uses an ideal conjugate matched source on transmit
>antennas.

NEC uses what the user tells it to use (with certain degenerate
exceptions; e.g., I've discovered that NEC-4 does not use a voltage
source of zero voltage if that's what you specify; instead it uses
1+j0 volts. With these exceptions, if you specify (say) a voltage
source with zero series impedance, that's what you get. You do not
get an "ideal conjugate matched source" unless that's what you
specify via EX and LD cards/commands or equivalents.

>If the antenna is fed with something other than an ideal conjugate
>load (i.e. 50 ohm coax) its pattern will change.

Untrue.

Don't take my word for it. Do the experiment. Run NEC and look at
the results.

>How can this be properly modeled in NEC? In particular, if we want to model
>a LPDA that has internal transmission lines which we want to feed with a 50
>ohm source. How do we a 50 ohm source to a segment that has an internal
>transmission line on it?

Use an LD command to put a 50-ohm resistance in series with a voltage
source in the relevant segment.

-Chuck.

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Received on Thu Oct 11 2001 - 12:45:33 EDT

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