Radio propagation
Radio propagation is a term used to explain how
radio waves behave when they are
transmitted, or are
propagated from one point on the
Earth to another.
In
"free space", all
electromagnetic waves (radio, X-rays, visual, etc) obey the
inverse-square law which states that an electromagnetic wave's strength is proportional to 1/(x
2), where x is the distance from the source. Doubling the distance from a transmitter means the strength is reduced to a quarter, and so on. High frequency propagation on Earth is not only affected by the
inverse-square model, but by a number of other factors determined by its path from point to point. This path can be a direct
line of sight path or an over-the-
horizon (see also
radio horizon) path aided by
refraction in the
ionosphere. Lower frequency long-distance propagation (between 30 and 3000 kHz) have the property of following the curvature of the earth (the "
groundwave") in the majority of occurrences. A variety of phenomena make radio propagation more complex.
Since radio propagation is somewhat unpredictable, such services as emergency locator transmitters, in-flight communication with ocean-crossing aircraft, and some television broadcasting have been moved to satellite transmitters. A satellite link, though expensive, can offer highly predictable and stable coverage of a given area.
A sudden ionospheric disturbance is often the result of large solar flares directed at earth. These solar flares can disrupt HF radio propagation.
Radio waves at different frequencies propagate in different ways.
Radio Frequencies and their Primary mode of Propagation| Radio Band | Frequency | Propagation Via |
|---|
| VLF | Very Low Frequency | 3 - 30 kHz | - Guided between the earth and the ionosphere |
| LF | Low Frequency | 30 - 300 kHz | - Guided between the earth and the ionosphere- Ground Waves |
| MF | Medium Frequency. | 300 - 3000 kHz | - Ground waves- E layer ionospheric refraction at night, when D layer absorption disappears |
| HF | High Frequency (Short Wave) | 3 - 30 MHz | - E layer ionospheric refraction- F layer ionospheric refraction |
| VHF | Very High Frequency | 30 - 300 MHz- Line-of-sight|- | UHF | Ultra High Frequency | 300 - 3000 MHz | - Line-of-sight |
The beginning and end of a communication circuit is the
antenna. The antenna will provide
gain and directivity on both
transmit and
receive. The take off angle of the antenna is based on the type of antenna, the height of the antenna above ground, and the type of ground below and in front of the antenna. The take off angle will determine the angle of attack on the ionosphere, which will effect if and where the signal will be refracted by the ionosphere.
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Main article:
Surface waveGround waves are radio waves that follow the curvature of the earth. Ground waves progress along the surface of the earth. These can be vertically polarized to allievate short circuiting the electric field through the conductivity of the ground. Since the ground is not a perfect electrical conductor, ground waves are attenuated as they follow the earth's surface. At low frequencies, ground losses are low and become lower at lower frequencies. The
VLF and
LF frequencies are mostly used for military communications, especially with ships and submarines.
Early commercial and professional radio services relied exclusively on
long wave, low frequencies and ground-wave propagation. To prevent interference with these services, amateur and experimental transmitters were restricted to the higher (HF) frequencies, felt to be useless since their ground-wave range was limited. Upon discovery of the other propagation modes possible at
medium wave and
short wave frequencies, the advantages of HF for commercial and military purposes became apparent. Amateur experimentation was then confined only to authorized frequencies in the range.
Ground plane reflection effects are an important factor in VHF line of sight propagation. The interference between the direct beam line-of-sight and the ground reflected beam often leads to an effective inverse-fourth-power law for ground-plane limited radiation.
Skywave propagation, also referred to as
skip, is any of the modes that rely on
refraction of radio waves in the
ionosphere, which is made up of one or more ionized layers in the upper
atmosphere. These layers are directly affected by the sun, and its varying activity (
sunspot cycle) determines the utility of these modes. Forecasting of skywave modes is of considerable interest to
amateur radio operators and commercial
marine and
aircraft communications, and also to shortwave broadcasters.
At
VHF and higher frequencies, the atmosphere at a height of around 6 miles (10 kilometres) can scatter some of the normally line-of-sight beam of radio frequency energy back toward the ground, allowing over-the-horizon communication between stations as far as 500 miles (800 km) apart.
A special form of tropo scattering relies on reflecting radio waves off the intensely ionized regions generated by
meteors. While this mode is very short-duration, often only a couple of seconds per event, it allows remote stations to communicate to a base that may be hundreds of miles (km) away, without the expense and power input required for a satellite link.
Diffraction phenomena by small obstacles are also important at high frequencies. Signals for urban
cellular telephony tend to be dominated by ground-plane effects as they travel over the rooftops of the urban environment. They then diffract over roof edges into the street, where
multipath propagation, absorption and diffraction phenomena dominate.
Low frequency radio waves travel easily through brick and stone. As the frequency rises, absorption effects become more important.
In addition, at
microwave or higher frequencies, absorption by molecular resonance in the atmosphere is a major factor in radio propagation. For example, in the 58 - 60 GHz band, there is a major absorption peak which makes this band useless for long-distance use. Beyond around 400 GHz, the Earth's atmosphere is effectively opaque to radio waves.
Heavy rain and snow also present major challenges to microwave reception.
*
Radio propagation model*
Skywave*
Fresnel zone*
Radio frequency*
Schumann resonance*
Cellular telephony*
Rayleigh fading*
E-skip*
FM DX*
Radio electronics* Larry D. Wolfgang et. al, (ed),
The ARRL Handbook for Radio Amateurs, Sixty-Eighth Edition , (1991), ARRL, Newington CT USA ISBN 0872591689
* Boithais, Lucien,
"Radio Wave Propagation". McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York. 1987. ISBN 0-07-006433-4
*
Radio signal propagation Articles about all aspects of radio signal propagation.
*
DXing.info - Propagation links*
HF Radio Propagation Software Firefox plug for monitoring radio propagation, website utility to display HF radio propagation status and article on understanding HF radio propagation forecasting