howto:hambasics:sections:propagation
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- | ====== Propagation ====== | ||
- | Radio wave propagation describes the way in which radio waves travel from one point to another. | ||
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- | {{ youtube> | ||
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- | ====== Direct Waves (Line Of Sight) ====== | ||
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- | {{ lineofsight.png? | ||
- | VHF radio waves (above 50 MHz) travel more or less in a straight line, and so cannot go much beyond the horizon. | ||
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- | For example, VA7FI' | ||
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- | For direct waves to occur, the height of the antenna needs to be many times greater than the wavelength of the radio wave so that the signal doesn' | ||
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- | Another similar station could be reached at about 90 km. | ||
- | ====== Ground Waves ====== | ||
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- | {{ groundwave.png? | ||
- | Ground waves occur when the signal curves with the Earth until it becomes too weak to be detected. | ||
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- | ====== Skywaves ====== | ||
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- | {{ skywave.png? | ||
- | Depending on the frequency and atmospheric conditions, it's possible for radio waves going up to reflect back down to Earth. | ||
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- | This process uses Ionospheric Refraction, which we'll see next.((The previous three images were taken from Milo Carroll' | ||
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- | ====== Ionosphere ====== | ||
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- | {{ ionosphere_layers.png? | ||
- | The region of our atmosphere between 50km and 400km altitude is called the ionosphere((Picture from [[wp> | ||
- | * a mirror that refracts and reflects a signal back to earth, | ||
- | * a clear window that lets a signal escape to space, | ||
- | * or a tinted window that absorbs the signal. | ||
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- | The reason for this complex behaviour is that the ionosphere is composed of electrons and electrically charged atoms and molecules (called //ions//) caused by the Sun's ultraviolet radiation (//solar flux// | ||
- | * The Day / Night cycle | ||
- | * The Summer / Winter cycle | ||
- | * 11-year [[wp> | ||
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- | Depending on the time of day, the ionosphere separates into 3 or 4 layers (of different gas composition): | ||
- | * D-Layer (50km -- 90km) | ||
- | * E-Layer (90km -- 150km) | ||
- | * F-Layer (150km -- 400km) | ||
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- | The distance radio waves can propagate via ionospheric refraction depends on many factors: | ||
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- | ===== Take Off Angle and Layer Height ===== | ||
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- | A radio signal will reach further when:((The animations that follow are not to scale.)) | ||
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- | * The take off angle is as low towards the horizon as possible, and | ||
- | * The ionosphere layer is as high as possible. | ||
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- | {{ takeoff.gif | ||
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- | The above animation is a gross oversimplification to illustrate the point that, all else being equal, signals sent near the horizon using the F layer will go further. | ||
- | * The maximum distance using one hop of the F< | ||
- | * The maximum distance using one hop of the E layer is around 2000 km. | ||
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- | In reality, the ionosphere is a medium with a continuously varying index of refraction rather than a series of discrete " | ||
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- | {{ 24180016.gif? | ||
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- | Note the following important terms on the above image: | ||
- | * The **Skip Distance** is the distance between the transmitter and the first hop of the reflected sky-wave. | ||
- | * The **Skip Zone** is the zone where no signal reaches. | ||
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- | And finally, real antennas do NOT transmit their signal at a single take off angle but over a range of them, which can vary depending on the antenna type and how high it is over the ground. | ||
- | {{ multiphop.png | ||
- | ===== Frequency ===== | ||
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- | Whether a layer lets a radio signal through, reflects it back, or absorbs it depends on the frequency. | ||
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- | * The D-Layer forms about half an hour after sunrise and disappears half an hour before sunset. It tends to absorb frequencies below 5 MHz and lets others through. | ||
- | * The E-Layer can reflect high angle 160m and 80m signals that made it through the D-Layer during daylight hours. | ||
- | * The F-Layer splits into two layers about half an hour before sunrise and recombines into one layer about half an hour after sunset. | ||
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- | {{ freq.gif | ||
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- | If the goal is to get our signal to travel as far as possible, there' | ||
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- | * The //Maximum Usable Frequency// (MUF) is the maximum frequency that the F layer will reflect before it turns transparent and lets the signal escape into space. | ||
- | * The //Lowest Usable Frequency// (LUF) is the lowest frequency that the D layer will let through before it turns opaque and absorbs the signal. | ||
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- | In the previous animation, frequencies below 6 MHz don't get through the D layer, and frequencies above 44 Mhz escape into space. | ||
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- | Sometimes, depending on the atmospheric and/or solar conditions, the LUF, is greater than the MUF. In that case, no reflection is possible. | ||
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- | {{ freq2.gif | ||
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- | In general, during the day: | ||
- | * The //Maximum Usable Frequency// (MUF) is around 50 MHz, which means the 6m, 2m, and 70cm bands are all direct waves. | ||
- | * The //Lowest Usable Frequency// (LUF) is around 15 Mhz, Which means that the 40m, 80m, and 160m bands are all ground waves. | ||
- | * Only frequencies between the 20m and 10m bands will be skywaves. | ||
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- | At night: | ||
- | * The D-Layer recombined into neutral molecules. | ||
- | * The MUF lowers to around 10 MHz, which means that even the 10m and 20m band escape into space. | ||
- | * The LUF also lowers so that the 160m and 80m band can be skywaves. | ||
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- | So normally, higher frequencies are better during the day (up to about 6m), and lower frequencies are better at night. | ||
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- | Here's a map of [[http:// | ||
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- | ===== The Gray Zone ===== | ||
- | Finally, because the D-Layer disappears before the F-Layer recombines, and reappears after the F-Layer splits, the propagation can be interesting around sunrise and sunset. | ||
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- | {{ light.gif | ||
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- | ===== Animation ===== | ||
- | Here's the animation if you want to experiment with it yourself. | ||
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- | {{earthpropagation.ggb 400,400}} | ||
- | ===== Meteor Scattering ===== | ||
- | When meteors enter the ionosphere, they create intensely ionized columns of air that can scatter radio waves for very short periods of time (from a fraction of a second to a couple seconds per event). | ||
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- | ===== Auroral backscatter ===== | ||
- | Auroral activity creates strong ionization of the E-region. | ||
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- | ===== Sporadic-E propagation ===== | ||
- | Sporadic-E propagation (not to be confused with ordinary E-layer propagation) takes advantage of ionization patches in the E-layer that drift westwards at speeds of a few hundreds of kilometres per hour. You can think of it as invisible clouds of ionized gases that move in the E-layer. If your signal is lucky enough to enter one of these clouds, it can bounce between 1000 and 2000 km in a single hop. Sporadic-E is most often observed on the 6m band. | ||
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- | ====== Troposphere ====== | ||
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- | In the previous section, we discussed how the Ionosphere (the region of our atmosphere between 50km and 400km altitude) can, reflect and refract radio waves, let them pass straight through, or absorbed them completely mostly due to the sun's ionization of the gas in these layers. | ||
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- | Here we discuss how the [[wp> | ||
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- | ===== Tropospheric Ducting ===== | ||
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- | The index of refraction of air is lower when the air is warmer. | ||
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- | Unlike Ionospheric refraction, Tropospheric ducting is observed at VHF frequencies as opposed to HF frequencies. | ||
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- | ===== Scattering ===== | ||
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- | At VHF frequencies, | ||
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- | Scattering can also allow HF signals from the skipzone to be heard. | ||
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- | ===== References ===== | ||
- | * [[https:// | ||
- | * [[http:// | ||
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- | ====== Questions ====== | ||
- | * B-007-001-001 -> B-007-004-002 | ||
- | * B-007-005-001 -> B-007-008-001 | ||
- | * B-007-008-006 -> B-007-008-011 | ||
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- | [[waveinteraction |{{/ | ||
howto/hambasics/sections/propagation.1605228551.txt.gz · Last modified: by va7fi