词条 | Halo antenna |
释义 |
A halo antenna, or halo, is a horizontally polarized, omnidirectional {{frac|1|2}} wavelength dipole antenna, which has been bent into a loop with a small break on the side of the loop directly opposite the feed point. The dipole ends are close but do not meet, and may have an air capacitor between them as needed to establish resonance. Early halo antennas[1] used two or more parallel loops, modeled after a 1943 patent[2] which was a folded dipole[3] bent into a circle. The two loop design broadens the SWR bandwidth and helps with impedance matching. More recent halo antennas have tended to use a single conductor fed with a gamma match. The newer approach uses less material and reduces wind load, but may be less mechanically robust, more narrow-banded, and requires a balun to prevent feed-line radiation. The gamma match is not an essential feature, however: There are other, uncommon methods of feeding halos. Halo antennas vs. other loop antennasA halo antenna is distinct from a full-wave loop, which is double its size or larger, whose element is a complete loop, with no breaks. Further, full-wave loops radiate predominantly perpendicular to the plane of the loop at their lowest frequency, whereas halos radiate mostly in the loop plane, with some radiation in the perpendicular direction (Z-axis, in the diagram). A halo antenna is distinct from the small-loop antenna in size,{{efn|Note carefully that for pattern and performance measurement, antenna size is measured as a fraction (or multiple) of the length of waves passing through it, for all antenna types; hence any one antenna’s effective “size” changes depending on the frequency the attached radio is operating on.}} radiation pattern, and radiation resistance, or efficiency. Halos are customarily operated with the plane of the loop oriented horizontally, parallel to the ground, whereas small-loop antennas often are oriented vertically. A small-loop antenna designed for transmitting is usually is about {{frac|1|4}} wave – half the size of a halo built for the same frequency – or a bit smaller. A small-loop can be at most a little less than {{frac|1|3}} wave in circumference, or {{frac|2|3}} of the size of a halo, and becomes increasingly difficult to tune as it approaches that maximum. The current profile of a small loop is uniform or very nearly so, whereas the current on the halo antenna is sinusoidal. Almost all of the current in a halo antenna is on the side opposite the break in the loop, which is usually also the loop's feed-point. The part of the halo near the split has high voltages, but carries essentially no current and produces no radiation. The part opposite that gap is the part that radiates, and tends to radiate slightly more towards the split in the loop. Because a {{frac|1|4}} wave small loop has the essentially the same current flowing in the entire loop it radiates in the plane of the loop uniformly, with no preferred direction in that plane. Unlike full-wave loops, halo antennas do not produce much radiation perpendicular to the plane of the loop but do produce some; their greatest radiation is in the plane of the loop. Full wave loops produce their highest radiation perpendicular to the loop and none in the plane of the loop. Small loops are the opposite: They produce their greatest radiation in the plane of the loop, and none in the perpendicular direction. Halo antennas’ radiation pattern, like their size, falls inbetween large and small loops, although somewhat closer to small loops. Size is relativeSince antenna size is measured in multiples of wavelengths, a halo antenna with sufficient capacitance to operate at half its design frequency will function as a small loop; likewise, a small loop fed with a signal at approximately double its maximum design frequency will function as a halo antenna, if its capacitance can be lowered enough to resonate. In that sense – even though built to deal with different practical constraints – the two types of loop antenna are nearly identical. The only two issues are
Advantages of a halo antenna
Disadvantages of a halo antenna
Notes{{notelist}}References1. ^Stites, Francis H. (October 1947). "A Halo for Six Meters". QST Magazine, p. 24. 2. ^{{cite patent |url=https://worldwide.espacenet.com/publicationDetails/originalDocument?CC=US&NR=2324462A&KC=A&FT=D&ND=&date=19430713&DB=&locale=en_EP# |title=High frequency antenna system |inventor=Leeds, L.M. & Scheldorf, M.W. |assign1=General Electric Company |country=US |number=2324462 |status=patent |gdate=1943-07-13 |fdate=1941-11-15}} 3. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.antenna-theory.com/antennas/foldeddipole.php |title=Folded Dipole |website=Antenna Theory}} 4. ^Danzer, Paul (Sep 2004). QST Magazine, p. 37 5. ^1 Tildon, Edward P. (Dec 1956). "Polarization Effects in V.H.F. Mobile". QST Magazine, p. 11–13. External links
1 : Antennas (radio) |
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