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  2. Driven and parasitic elements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Driven_and_parasitic_elements

    The driven element of the antenna is usually a half-wave dipole, its length half a wavelength of the radio waves used. The parasitic elements are of two types. A "reflector" is slightly longer (around 5%) than a half-wavelength. It serves to reflect the radio waves in the opposite direction.

  3. Dipole antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dipole_antenna

    The most commonly used is the center-fed half-wave dipole which is just under a half-wavelength long. The radiation pattern of the half-wave dipole is maximum perpendicular to the conductor, falling to zero in the axial direction, thus implementing an omnidirectional antenna if installed vertically, or (more commonly) a weakly directional ...

  4. Reflective array antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflective_array_antenna

    Two element dipole array in front of a one wavelength square reflector used as gain standard. The gain of practical array antennas is limited to about 25–30 dB. Two half wave elements spaced a half wave apart and a quarter wave from a reflecting screen have been used as a standard gain antenna with about 9.8 dBi at its design frequency. [4]

  5. Log-periodic antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log-periodic_antenna

    In general terms, at any given frequency the log-periodic design operates somewhat similar to a three-element Yagi antenna; the dipole element closest to resonant at the operating frequency acts as a driven element, with the two adjacent elements on either side as director and reflector to increase the gain, the shorter element in front acting ...

  6. Halo antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halo_antenna

    A full-wave loop antenna is slightly more than two half-wavelengths in circumference, which is a bit more than double the size of a halo antenna designed to operate on the same frequency. In contrast, the two semi-circles of a resonant loop, each is a half wavelength long. There is no gap, and each semicircle ends at the semi-circles ...

  7. Yagi–Uda antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yagi–Uda_antenna

    Note that at zero spacing we obtain the self-impedance of a half-wave dipole, 73 + j43 Ω. When a passive radiator is placed close (less than a quarter wavelength distance) to the driven dipole, it interacts with the near field , in which the phase-to-distance relation is not governed by propagation delay, as would be the case in the far field.

  8. Dipole field strength in free space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dipole_field_strength_in...

    Dipole field strength in free space, in telecommunications, is the electric field strength caused by a half wave dipole under ideal conditions. The actual field strength in terrestrial environments is calculated by empirical formulas based on this field strength.

  9. Half wave dipole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/?title=Half_wave_dipole&redirect=no

    Download as PDF ; Printable version; In other projects ... Appearance. move to sidebar hide. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia ... Retrieved from "https://en ...