Assignment 2 Compare Travelling Wave and Standing Wave Antennas
Assignment 2 Compare Travelling Wave and Standing Wave Antennas
Assignment 2 Compare Travelling Wave and Standing Wave Antennas
It is however possible to have a wave confined to a given space in a medium and still
produce a regular wave pattern that is readily discernible amidst the motion of the
medium. For instance, if an elastic rope is held end-to-end and vibrated at just the right
frequency, a wave pattern would be produced that assumes the shape of a sine wave and
is seen to change over time. The wave pattern is only produced when one end of the rope
is vibrated at just the right frequency. When the proper frequency is used, the interference
of the incident wave and the reflected wave occur in such a manner that there are specific
points along the medium that appear to be standing still. Because the observed wave
pattern is characterized by points that appear to be standing still, the pattern is often
called a standing wave pattern. There are other points along the medium whose
displacement changes over time, but in a regular manner. These points vibrate back and
forth from a positive displacement to a negative displacement; the vibrations occur at
regular time intervals such that the motion of the medium is regular and repeating. A
pattern is readily observable.
The diagram at the right depicts a standing wave pattern in a medium. A snapshot of the
medium over time is depicted using various colors. Note that point A on the medium
moves from a maximum positive to a maximum negative displacement over time. The
diagram only shows one-half cycle of the motion of the standing wave pattern. The
motion would continue and persist, with point A returning to the same maximum positive
displacement and then continuing its back-and-forth vibration between the up to the down
position. Note that point B on the medium is a point that never moves. Point B is a point
of no displacement. Such points are known as nodes and will be discussed in more detail
later in this lesson. The standing wave pattern that is shown at the right is just one of
many different patterns that could be produced within the rope. Other patterns will be
discussed later in the lesson.
RESONANT ANTENNAS
The majority of antenna designs are based on the resonance principle. This relies on the
behaviour of moving electrons, which reflect off surfaces where the dielectric constant
changes, in a fashion similar to the way light reflects when optical properties change. In
these designs, the reflective surface is created by the end of a conductor, normally a thin
metal wire or rod, which in the simplest case has a feed point at one end where it is
connected to a transmission line. The conductor, or element, is aligned with the electrical
field of the desired signal, normally meaning it is perpendicular to the line from the
antenna to the source (or receiver in the case of a broadcast antenna). [15]
The radio signal's electrical component induces a voltage in the conductor. This causes an
electrical current to begin flowing in the direction of the signal's instantaneous field.
When the resulting current reaches the end of the conductor, it reflects, which is
equivalent to a 180 degree change in phase. If the conductor is 14 of a wavelength long,
current from the feed point will undergo 90 degree phase change by the time it reaches
the end of the conductor, reflect through 180 degrees, and then another 90 degrees as it
travels back. That means it has undergone a total 360 degree phase change, returning it to
the original signal. The current in the element thus adds to the current being created from
the source at that instant. This process creates a standing wave in the conductor, with the
maximum current at the feed.