DocumentCode
1100178
Title
Notes on Radio Transmission
Author
Anderson, Clifford N.
Author_Institution
Engineer, American Telephone and Telegraph Company, New York City
Volume
19
Issue
7
fYear
1931
fDate
7/1/1931 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1150
Lastpage
1165
Abstract
Considerable data on radio transmission have been obtained the past few years in connection with the establishment and operation of various radio-telephone services by the Bell System. It is the purpose of these notes to present certain aspects of some of these data which may be of interest in the development of a general physical picture of radio transmission and in indicating the effects of disturbances accompanying storms in the earth\´s magnetic field. The general results which are arrived at are: 1. Neglecting short time fading, the maximum field strength received at a given point for frequencies up to at least 4 megacycles are in general agreement with those calculated by the inverse-distance law and the minimum field strength (over-water transmission) are in approximate agreement with those calculated by the Austin-Cohen formula. 2. There appears to be a daylight absorption band in the neighborhood of 40 kilocycles (North Atlantic transmission) which reduces minimum daytime fields in that vicinity below the minimum limit given above. 3. The effect of solar disturbances is to increase the absorption to "sky wave" transmission throughout the entire radio-frequency spectrum generally and to reduce or eliminate the 40-kilocycle absorption band thereby increasing daylight fields for transmission on frequencies in that vicinity.
Keywords
Cities and towns; Data engineering; Earth; Electromagnetic wave absorption; Fading; Frequency; Rivers; Storms; Telegraphy; Telephony;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Radio Engineers, Proceedings of the Institute of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0731-5996
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JRPROC.1931.222441
Filename
1671034
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