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Questions tagged [physics]

-1 votes
1 answer
278 views

"But, radio waves can't travel through metal", I hear you say. Well, you know that, and I know that, so, let's do a experiment. If I use the best antenna (say those parabolic antenna ...
John Doe's user avatar
  • 823
2 votes
1 answer
349 views

inner and outer conductor diameters of 1 mm and 5 mm respectively, is filled with a non-magnetic PTFE dielectric having εr = 2.55. frequency = 1 GHz.
Praskand's user avatar
4 votes
6 answers
199 views

An amplitude changing carrier wave causes sidebands to appear next to it when viewed in the frequency domain. But if those sidebands themselves also change with time (because the modulating signal is ...
JanKanis's user avatar
  • 415
4 votes
2 answers
10k views

I have read everything I can find about monopole (vertical antenna) radials, and also watched many YouTube videos that touch on the topic. I see conflicting information about what they do, where a ...
User5754448's user avatar
5 votes
3 answers
2k views

I've been trying to understand how dipole antennas work, and I believe I understand the basics when they're fed via a balanced feed line. In fact, every dipole physics YouTube video and web page I can ...
Asker2093022's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
111 views

Can a laser be used as an antenna? Can a beam of any type extend transmission distance of an electromagnetic field? https://medium.com/starts-with-a-bang/this-is-why-the-2018-nobel-prize-in-...
Muze's user avatar
  • 1
6 votes
4 answers
14k views

I have read that radio waves just keep traveling but the signal gets weaker because of how the wave spreads. OK, I get this, but what confuses me is that satellites emit signals from space that our ...
sirshakir's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
966 views

I have some historical data on radio stations, but unfortunately, the dataset only has these variables: the power of the transmitter, in watts the coordinates of the radio tower Unfortunately, I don'...
Michael A's user avatar
  • 185
2 votes
2 answers
5k views

Given this question from the full license exam in the UK: What is the field strength at a distance of 7m from an antenna with an effective radiated power of 100W? in which the answer is: 10 V/m ...
Pablo Fernandez's user avatar
1 vote
3 answers
89 views

smartphone: Samsung Galaxy S4 mini coating is probably crome, a few microns thick could it be that removing the coating will have the opposite effect, as in lowering the signal strength instead of ...
hedgehog's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
2k views

I am winding an EFHW matchbox and many of the designs I've found (including the diagram provided with the kit I bought) include a sort of "twist" when winding them: (Image taken from this post and ...
natevw - AF7TB's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
286 views

We know that the primary source of interference at HF is atmospheric noise. Thus, all else being equal, the strength of heard noise is a fair indicator of RX system performance (such as in adjusting ...
Kevin Reid AG6YO's user avatar
  • 25.2k
5 votes
1 answer
1k views

Why is it that some frequencies transmitted at some known direction are reflected back to earth, yet others transmitted at the same direction, power and polarity pass through into space with no ...
BenAlabaster's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
329 views

I am designing an antenna for a device and was hoping to gain some insight in the correct design direction for the antenna. The Idea: A receiver & antenna that fits in a 6" diameter by 3" deep ...
Josh Cox's user avatar
  • 241
5 votes
3 answers
401 views

Higher frequencies have a higher energy, simply stated by Planck's constant. When I am transmitting 100 watts on 500 kHz, and transmitting 100 watts on 5 GHz, is there an energy difference in the wave?...
Skyler 440's user avatar
  • 7,730

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