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Re: Topband: Skywaves from Monopole Surface Waves

To: topband@contesting.com
Subject: Re: Topband: Skywaves from Monopole Surface Waves
From: Michael Tope <W4EF@dellroy.com>
Date: Tue, 09 Oct 2012 06:14:11 -0700
List-post: <topband@contesting.com">mailto:topband@contesting.com>
On 10/7/2012 3:42 AM, Richard Fry wrote:


It will be seen from the data that no "notch" exists in the fields radiated by the monopole at elevation angles of 3 degrees and less, as expected by some when considering only the far-field patterns shown by MoM (NEC) software, and in antenna textbooks.

That low-angle radiation can reach the ionosphere to produce a skywave,
under the right conditions.   That skywave can be very useful to hams
using vertical monopoles, even though its existence may not be
recognized.

Everyone seems to agree that at moderately short distances from the vertical radiator (a few miles), there will be pattern fill-in at very low-angles and that this fill-in is not predicted by the far-field pattern equations. What everyone seems to be dancing around (Dick hints at it above) is whether or not any of this low-angle ground-wave energy ever reaches the ionosphere and if so, how? Clearly if you keep increasing the distance from the vertical radiator, the E-field at zero elevation angle drops faster than 1/r (except in the case of infinitely conductive ground) so eventually the "notch" in the pattern predicted by the far-field equations appears. One can image taking the helicopter used by Dick's BC engineer friend and repeating E-field versus height measurements at increasing distance intervals out to many miles. In fact, one of the NEC-4 surface-wave plots Dick posted a few days ago shows that for average soil a fairly deep low-angle notch (~ 20dB) has already appeared in the elevation pattern at just 20 miles distance from the vertical radiator:

http://i62.photobucket.com/albums/h85/rfry-100/Surface_Wave_Flds.jpg

So again my question - if this low-angle ground-wave (aka surface-wave) energy dies off so quickly (e.g. down 20dB at just 20 miles), how does any of it get to the ionosphere where it can be useful for topband DX?

73, Mike W4EF......................


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