To: | topband@contesting.com |
---|---|
Subject: | Re: Topband: circular polarization on 160m -BTW |
From: | Carsten Esch <carsten.esch@appello.de> |
Date: | Wed, 12 Feb 2014 20:23:56 +0100 |
List-post: | <topband@contesting.com">mailto:topband@contesting.com> |
... circular polarization is standard on 23cm, 13cm and 9cm EME. For 10
GHz it is becoming more popular (because there are now feed designs that
can be (more) easily reproduced on this band.
73ss Carsten, DL6LAU (QRV on 23cm, 13cm, 10GHz and 24GHz EME @ DL0SHF) Am 12.02.14 19:47, schrieb Charlie Cunningham: BTW - does anyone know if the EME boys employ circular polarization? 73, Charlie, K4OTV -----Original Message----- From: Topband [mailto:topband-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Charlie Cunningham Sent: Wednesday, February 12, 2014 1:35 PM To: 'Tom W8JI'; dado@prijedor.com; topband@contesting.com Subject: Re: Topband: circular polarization on 160m Hello all, My original post regarding circular polarization receiving antennas for 160 was posted 2/2/2014 as a comment on Bill, VE3CSK's post regarding his observation of apparent rapid polarization shifts in the signal received from FT5ZM, on Amsteram Island at their sunrise. Bill was using his K3 in diversity mode to observe the apparent rapid polarization shifts by using both vertical and horizontal receive antennas. The rapid apparent polarization shifts seemed quite different from the slower QSB that we often experience on 160. I post my original hurried off-hand comment and Bill's post below; "I wonder what circular-polarized RX antennas might have to offer on 160? Charlie, K4OTV -----Original Message----- From: Topband [mailto:topband-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Bill and Liz Sent: Sunday, February 02, 2014 8:37 PM To: topband@contesting.com Subject: Topband: FT5ZM SIGNAL I have been listening several evenings now on 160M using my K3 in diversity mode with the TX vertical array on one receiver and a full-wave horizontal loop on the other. I have been struck by the often rapid change in the signal as received on one antenna or the other. As sunrise on Amsterdam approaches this shift becomes quite rapid, with the recovered signal bouncing back and forth ear to ear. Early on, before I began listening in diversity mode, I thought it was rapid QSB taking the signal down into the noise but now realize that it is the angle of the arriving signal which is rapidly changing over the path. No wonder some of the guys have been having problems copying/working the expedition on topband! Bill VE3CSK" This seemed to provoke an interesting, lively and informative discussion by a number of people who have explored 160m ionosphere propagation in far greater depth than I have. Some of the commentary piqued my interest and caused me to want to do some more research! Thanks guys, and thanks, Tom, for your recent postings of your recordings from KH6AT etc.! Rather informative and thought-provoking! I must confess that all of my experience with circular polarization has been at UHF (400 MHz range) for spacecraft telemetry and 1.4 GHz for GPS signals. In these cases circular polarization is employed to contend with the Faraday Rotation of signals as they propagate through Earth's atmosphere. These signals generally originate beyond the ionosphere except for a few birds that might pass through the "magneto-tail" on the lee-side (dark-side) of earth away from the solar wind. Very different from 160m signals that originate on Earth's surface and are reflected from an ionization layer in the ionosphere! Bill's observations are really interesting and seem to suggest something other than the usual slow fades that we are used to on topband. Surely piqued my curiosity! I would think that with proper phase control one could construct circular polarized 160m receive antennas that could be less than full-size if preamps were employed. It's interesting to consider that such an antenna would probably be RHCP in one direction and LHCP in the opposite direction! If I wasn't so disabled at present, I' be tempted to build something to experiment with, just because I miss building experimenting with and measuring antennas! Very enjoyable activities for me! Anyway, thanks all for all the commentary and insightful and thought-provoking discussions! Bill's observations seem to suggest something different at work that may deserve some further investigation and exploration! That led me to wondering about circular polarization, or perhaps some rapid high-speed commutation between horizontally polarized and vertically polarized receive antennas. Thanks! 73, Charlie, K4OTV -----Original Message----- From: Topband [mailto:topband-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Tom W8JI Sent: Wednesday, February 12, 2014 10:41 AM To: dado@prijedor.com; topband@contesting.com Subject: Re: Topband: circular polarization on 160m Here are some pictures and a sound file or two... http://www.w8ji.com/HF%20circular%20polarization.htm ----- Original Message ----- From: <dado@prijedor.com> To: <topband@contesting.com> Sent: Wednesday, February 12, 2014 6:41 AM Subject: Re: Topband: circular polarization on 160mhi Guys, interesting discussion If want, hear this file, https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B8I6Nck0GwTdYTI0MzVkY2QtYjUyYS00YmE3LTk4NTktNWVlNzE2ZGFiYmE1/edit?usp=sharing this is E74AW and OZ1LXJ recording of ZL3IX, at same time, John was so kind and sinchronise those two audio recordings together in one file, will hear how QSB is different on different station, when peak is on my side, deep gos to John and VV thanks, 73 cul dado E74AW Дана 06.02.2014 06:21, James Wolf је написао:Jose, I am onlypresenting the possibility that if the ionosphere (where 160 propagation happens) isn't uniformly smooth and instead consists of "warps,wrinkles and tilts" that in a *dynamic ionosphere*, this couldbe at leastone reason we are experiencing slow fades. Ellipticalpolarization, assuming that it is ever changing, could provideyetanother degree of selective fading.I'm don't think I *totally*understand why KL7AJ says that "at HF theionosphere forbids thepropagation of linearly polarized signals". If atthe magneticequator, and signals were East to West to equal the earthmagnetictilt of the signals, it seems that at an instance in time that a linear polarized signal could happen. But that may be nit picking.Jim - KR9UFrom: JC N4IS [mailto:n4is@comcast.net] Sent:Wednesday, February 05, 2014 10:45 PMTo: jbwolf@comcast.net; 'TomW8JI'; herbs@vitelcom.net;topband@contesting.com Subject: RE:Topband: circular polarization on 160mJames You brought agood article about HF propagation, however the behavor on 160misdifferent from HF. If you check on the KL7A arcticle figure 1 what is happening between 1 and 2 MHz you can see that the green and red does notbehaivor the same way as above 2 MHz. This subject is morecomplex because there us no shirt answer, actualybetween 1 and 2 MHz.the ionosphere does not support linear polarirationwave. The wave areactualy eliptical and not circular for most directions.You cancheck the long answer on the "must read book" from NM7M . R Brown'TheBig Gun's Guied to Low Band Propagation" . Magneto-iomic Theory pag 47 to 56 ; and Power coupling pag 57.Thanks to Karl. K9LA, the bookis available on his also must read site onthe 160m linkhttp://k9la.us/html/160m.html [1]Regards JC N4IS_________________Topband Reflector Archives -http://www.contesting.com/_topband [2] Links: ------ [1] http://k9la.us/html/160m.html [2] http://www.contesting.com/_topband _________________ Topband Reflector Archives - http://www.contesting.com/_topband ----- No virus found in this message. 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