Title :
Sweep-frequency studies in beyond-the-horizon propagation
Author_Institution :
Hughes Aircraft Company, Culver City, CA, USA
fDate :
10/1/1959 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper considers the bandwidth characteristics of the propagating medium in tropospheric beyond-the-horizon propagation. To study this problem, a frequency-sweep experiment was performed over a 171-mile experimental circuit. A 4.11-kmc transmitter was frequency modulated at a 1000-cps rate over a 20-mc band. The receiver was swept nonsynchronously over the same band at a 30-cps rate. The resultant pulses were displayed on an oscillograph and photographed at the rate of one frame every two seconds. The experiment used a 28-foot transmitting antenna and 8-, 28- and 60-foot receiving antennas. Sequences of selected sweep-frequency pictures are shown for various antenna combinations and transmission conditions. The bandwidths from the experiment are compared with a calculation based on the common volume geometry. Photographs of signals received simultaneously from a twin-feed horizontal diversity system are also shown and discussed.
Keywords :
Microwave radio propagation meteorological factors; Tropospheric radio propagation; Antennas and propagation; Bandwidth; Circuits; Delay estimation; Diffraction; Frequency; Geometry; Laboratories; Receiving antennas; Transmitting antennas;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IRE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TAP.1959.1144692