ADVANCED COMPUTER NETWORKS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 24
About This Presentation
Title:

ADVANCED COMPUTER NETWORKS

Description:

advanced computer networks antenna s presented by sankepally vidya sagar sai naveen sesham shashikant lakuma overview introduction types parameters models ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:86
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 25
Provided by: wiu48
Learn more at: http://faculty.wiu.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: ADVANCED COMPUTER NETWORKS


1
ADVANCED COMPUTER NETWORKS
  • ANTENNAS
  • Presented By
  • SANKEPALLY VIDYA SAGAR
  • SAI NAVEEN SESHAM
  • SHASHIKANT LAKUMA

2
OVERVIEW
  • INTRODUCTION
  • TYPES
  • PARAMETERS
  • MODELS
  • CONCLUSION
  • QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

3
INTRODUCTION
  • The origin of the word antenna relative to
    wireless apparatus is attributed to Guglielmo
    Marconi. Marconi's use of the word antenna
    (Italian for pole) would become a popular term
    for what today is uniformly known as the antenna
    .
  • Antennas play a primary role in wireless
    network.
  • An antenna is a transducer designed to transmit
    or receive radio waves which are a class of
    electromagnetic waves.
  • Antennas convert radio frequency electrical
    currents into electromagnetic waves and vice
    versa.

4
PHYSICAL DESIGN
  • Physically, an antenna is an arrangement of
    conductors that generate a radiating
    electromagnetic field in response to an applied
    alternating voltage and the associated
    alternating electric current, or can be placed in
    an electromagnetic field so that the field will
    induce an alternating current in the antenna and
    a voltage between its terminals.
  • Antennas usually work in air or outer space, it
    can also be operated under water or even through
    soil and rock at certain frequencies for short
    distances

5
A building rooftop supporting numerous dish and
sectored mobile telecommunications antennas
6
TYPES OF ANTENNAS
  • There are two fundamental types of antennas

  • Omni-directional and Directional.
  • A omni-directional antenna (such as a vertical
    rod) is an antenna system which radiates power
    uniformly in one plane with a directive pattern
    shape in a perpendicular plane.
  • A directional antenna is an antenna which
    radiates greater power in one or more directions
    allowing for increased performance on transmit
    and receive and reduced interference from
    unwanted sources.

7
Yagi-Uda Antenna
  • By adding additional conducting rods or coils
    (called elements) and varying their length,
    spacing, and orientation ,an antenna with these
    specific desired properties can be created, such
    as a Yagi-Uda Antenna

8
CUTAIN ANTENNA
9
ANTENNAS
  • Rooftop television Antenna.

10
ANTENNA PARAMETERS
  • Resonant Frequency.
  • Gain.
  • Radiation Pattern.
  • Efficiency.
  • Bandwidth.
  • Polarization.
  • Impedance.

11
TRANSMISSION AND RECEPTION
  • Antennas used for transmission have a maximum
    power rating, beyond which heating, arcing or
    sparking may occur in the components, which may
    cause them to be damaged or destroyed.
  • Antennas designed specifically for reception
    might be optimized for noise rejection
    capabilities.
  • All of the antenna parameters are expressed in
    terms of a transmission antenna, but are
    identically applicable to a receiving antenna .

12
ANTENNA MODELS
  • Isotropic radiator.
  • Dipole antenna.
  • Random wire antenna.
  • Horn antenna.

13
ANTENNA MODELS
  • The isotropic radiator is a purely theoretical
    antenna that radiates equally in all directions.
  • The dipole antenna is simply two wires pointed in
    opposite directions arranged either horizontally
    or vertically, with one end of each wire
    connected to the radio and the other end hanging
    free in space.
  • The random wire antenna is simply a very long
    wire with one end connected to the radio and the
    other in free space, arranged in any way most
    convenient for the space available.
  • The Horn is used where high gain is needed, the
    wavelength is short and space is not an issue.

14
AFFECT ON GROUND
  • At frequencies used in antennas, the ground
    behaves mainly as a dielectric.
  • The conductivity of ground at these frequencies
    is negligible.
  • When an electromagnetic wave arrives at the
    surface of an object, two waves are created one
    enters the dielectric and the other is reflected.
  • If the object is a conductor, the transmitted
    wave is negligible and the reflected wave has
    almost the same amplitude as the incident one.
  • Most of the electromagnetic waves emitted by an
    antenna to the ground below the antenna at
    moderate (say lt 60) angles of incidence enter
    the earth and are absorbed .
  • When the angle of incidence is near 90 (grazing
    incidence) almost all the wave is reflected.

15
Antennas Behavior On Ground
16
  • The vertical component of the current reflects
    without changing sign. The horizontal component
    reverses sign at reflection

17
CONCLUSION
  • Antennas are used in systems such as radio and
    television broadcasting, point-to-point radio
    communication, wireless LAN, radar, and space
    exploration .
  • ANY MOBLIE NETWORK CANT BE IMAGINED WITHOUT
    ANTENNA.

18
QUESTIONS
  • Q1. Why did you choose titans mysterious radio
    wave for explaining the concept of antennas?
  • Q2. The formula mentioned in the conclusion. What
    significance it has and why/where it is used?
  • Q3. How do antennas radiate. Could you explain in
    detail?
  • Q4.What is the size of antenna and does size of
    the antenna has effects on other factors?
  • Q5.How antennas parameters influence the design
    of antennas?

19
QUESTION 1
  • Q1. The formula mentioned in the conclusion. What
    significance it has and why/where it is used?
  • The simple formula, ltPrgt(E02 /?)(?2/8p), for
    the received power of an antenna with a matched
    load in an over-moded cavity actually holds for
    an antenna of any shape and size.
  • Where ,? The radiation efficiency,
  • E0is the electrical field radiated by the
    antenna
  • ?Wave Length.

20
QUESTIONS 2
  • Q2. How do antennas radiate. Could you explain in
    detail?
  • Ans. The radiation of an antenna describes the
    relative strength of the radiated field in
    various directions from the antenna, at a fixed
    or constant distance. The radiation pattern is a
    "reception pattern" as well, since it also
    describes the receiving properties of the
    antenna. The radiation pattern is
    three-dimensional . In order to know how an
    antenna radiates, let us first consider how
    radiation occurs.
  • A conducting wire radiates mainly because of
    time-varying current or an acceleration
    (ordeceleration) of charge. If there is no motion
    of charges in a wire, no radiation takes place,
    since no flow of current occurs.
  • Radiation will not occur even if charges are
    moving with uniform velocity along a straight
    wire. However, charges moving with uniform
    velocity along a curved or bent wire will produce
    radiation.

21
QUESTION 3
  • Q3.What is the size of antenna and does size of
    the antenna has effects on other factors?
  • Unfortunately, there is an inverserelationship
    between antenna gain and antenna beamwidth.
    Additionally, there is a proportional
    relationship between antenna gain and the antenna
    size.
  • Antenna Size Gain 2 / 4.
  • The conclusion, therefore, would be that if we
    increase the antenna size by a factor of two in
    one plane, we would decrease the beamwidth in
    that plane by a factor of two and increase the
    antenna gain by 3 dB.

22
QUESTION 4
  • Q4.How antennas parameters influence the design
    of antennas?
  • Ans.YES
  • An antenna with a low gain emits radiation in all
    directions equally, whereas a high-gain antenna
    will preferentially radiate in particular
    directions.
  • For the ideal isotropic antenna, it would be a
    sphere. For a typical dipole, this would be a
    toroid
  • Radiation in an antenna is caused by radiation
    resistance which can only be measured as part of
    total resistance including loss resistance. Loss
    resistance usually results in heat generation
    rather than radiation, and reduces efficiency.
  • The bandwidth of an antenna may be increased by
    several techniques, including using thicker
    wires, replacing wires with cages to simulate a
    thicker wire, tapering antenna components (like
    in a feed horn), and combining multiple antennas
    into a single assembly .
  • PolarizationIt has nothing in common with
    antenna directionality terms "horizontal",
    "vertical" and "circular". Thus, a simple
    straight wire antenna will have one polarization
    when mounted vertically, and a different
    polarization when mounted horizontally.

23
  • ANY QUESTIONS
  • ???

24
  • THANK YOU
  • Have a gr8 day
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com