DocumentCode
1046457
Title
Studies of meteor propagation at 49 and 74 mc
Author
Berry, J.B., Jr. ; James, J.C. ; Meeks, M.L.
Author_Institution
Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA
Volume
9
Issue
4
fYear
1961
fDate
7/1/1961 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
395
Lastpage
403
Abstract
The characteristics of meteor propagation were investigated over two nearly parallel paths from Walpole, Mass., to Congaree, S. C. (1250 km) and from Walpole, Mass., to Smyrna, Ga. (1480 km). Simultaneous measurements were made at 49 Mc and 74 Mc. The duty cycle for meteor propagation was measured at both frequencies with separate determination of the contributions from underdense trails, specular overdense trails, and nonspecular trails. As a function of signal amplitude
, the data could be fitted by assuming the duty cycle to be proportional to
, where
lies between 0.9 and 1.8 depending on the time of day and types of trail contributing. Roughly half of the duty cycle came from nonspecular overdense trails and only 10 to 20 per cent from underdense trails. Simultaneous measurements with two separate receiving systems were made at both 49 Mc and 74 Mc in order to determine the effects of antenna height-difference and various lateral antenna-separations. The meteor signals were strongly decorrelated by certain antenna height-differences. Overdense trails produced some decorrelation with lateral antenna-separation, but underdense trails gave well-correlated echoes. No significant differences in meteor echo rate were found between receiving systems in very flat terrain at Congaree, S. C., and hilly terrain at Smyrna, Ga. For the hilly terrain, best signal correlation was found for nearby antennas which were at the same height above sea level.
, the data could be fitted by assuming the duty cycle to be proportional to
, where
lies between 0.9 and 1.8 depending on the time of day and types of trail contributing. Roughly half of the duty cycle came from nonspecular overdense trails and only 10 to 20 per cent from underdense trails. Simultaneous measurements with two separate receiving systems were made at both 49 Mc and 74 Mc in order to determine the effects of antenna height-difference and various lateral antenna-separations. The meteor signals were strongly decorrelated by certain antenna height-differences. Overdense trails produced some decorrelation with lateral antenna-separation, but underdense trails gave well-correlated echoes. No significant differences in meteor echo rate were found between receiving systems in very flat terrain at Congaree, S. C., and hilly terrain at Smyrna, Ga. For the hilly terrain, best signal correlation was found for nearby antennas which were at the same height above sea level.Keywords
Electromagnetic scattering by plasma media; Meteorology; VHF radio propagation; Antennas and propagation; Bandwidth; Contracts; Decorrelation; Frequency measurement; Helium; Receiving antennas; Scattering; Sea level; Sea measurements;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Antennas and Propagation, IRE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0096-1973
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TAP.1961.1145022
Filename
1145022
Link To Document