Old Marconi Patent Inspires Tiny New Gigahertz Antenna 76
agent elevator writes Gehan Amaratunga and a group of engineers in England noted that the Guglielmo Marconi's famous British patent application from 1900 had an interesting and little noticed detail. It depicted a transmitter linked to an antenna connected to a coil, which had one end dangling while the RF signal was fed to the middle of the coil. That detail inspired them to develop a way to reduce the size of a GHz antenna without significant transmission loss by using dielectrics as the radio wave emitting material instead of conductors.
My B.S. Detector is Going Off (Score:5, Informative)
Marconi's connection to the center tap of a coil with one end not connected worked by broken symmetry? Really? It wasn't just a method of tuning a coil to the correct reactance for a particular frequency?
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I agree: it looks like a diagram denoting a tune-able antenna.
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It looks like a ham radio "screwdriver" antenna except miniaturized by a 3-4 orders of magnitude to match the 3-4 orders of magnitude change in wavelength.
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Clearly you missed the bit where they invoked quantum mechanics, surely that explains away all the inaccuracies, like the fact you can already buy chip scale dielectric antennas
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I noticed that my vertical transmitting antenna often works better if I connect a horizontal wire about the same length as the antenna to ground at its base! The wire isn't connected to the transmitting side of the circuit at all! And how well it works varies depending on the length! Obviously there is some deus ex machina at work here...
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Thank you for all your work!! (love busybox!!)
BSEE here. I'm impressed that you've experimented and observed the resulting change. Actually your horizontal wire _is_ part of the circuit and is the beginnings of a "ground plane" for the vertical (monopole) antenna. A typical ground plane configuration is either a gridwork of metal, or just 4 horizontal elements in an "X" and yes, you'll get better efficiency. https://teknikelektronikansp.files.wordpress.com/2014/01/picture31.jpg [wordpress.com]
Obviously it still works
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Sorry, I was being sarcastic. I happen have built more than one counterpoise.
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The thing that I really hate about Innovation Stories is that the reporter invariably doesn't understand what's going on, and invariably is easily convinced that The Obviiously Very Technical People have some very valuable invention.
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Clearly none of the "Engineers" had a ham license.
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Counterpoise (Score:2)
Sometimes. But you're missing what a Counterpoise [wikipedia.org] does.
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That is a good point, but I'm not sure how well it would work over standard fractional wavelength radials on larger systems. The Marconi drawing has lighting and static charge protection from the grounded side of the voltage transformer that's being fed from the transmitter. It could be very useful for space conscious form factors, and I don't know anyone that wants a radial and whip system for a cell phone.
From Marconi's drawing, it looks more like use of a coil as either a resonant stub or shorted stub [wikipedia.org]
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In any case I can hardly believe that quantum theory is needed to explain the behaviour of antennas. Most surprising, however is to find such clumsy explanation in Spectrum, the flagship journal of the IEEE.
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I've read the underlying papers: they do not use quantum theory to explain the behavior of antennas.
"Marconi's connection to the center tap of a coil with one end not connected worked by broken symmetry? Really? It wasn't just a method of tuning a coil to the correct reactance for a particular frequency?"
Well, of course one purpose was to have a variable inductance, but that's not what's at question.The issue here is why the other end of the coil is not earthed, apparently intentionally.
The issue about the
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If the end of the coil that is hanging is grounded (earthed), it becomes an autotransformer. As it's shown, it's a variable inductor and the disconnected end is irrelevant and has no meaningful physical effect at the frequency a spark transmitter could have reached.
This comment [slashdot.org] seems to get closer to what they actually mean in their scientific paper. But the article about it is garble and the paper might suffer from second-language issues, and a lack of familiarity with the terms used in RF engineering.
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...lack of familiarity with the terms used in RF engineering.
Got beaten to the punch here. I was about to submit this confusing quote from TFA:
the two-wire ribbons used during televisionâ(TM)s first few decades to send RF signals from rooftop VHF antennas to television sets without any loss. The electric RF current in the two conductors flow in opposite directions and have opposite phase. Because of the translational symmetry (the two conductors are parallel) the radiation fields cancel each other out, so there is no net radiation into space.
Took a few reads before I finally figured out they were referring to 300-ohm twin lead...
[digression]Captcha for this is "shudders". Indeed...[/digression]
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Yep. A physicist trying to explain a balanced line to other physicists, without knowing the word for it.
Haldane would be spinning in his grave.
IEEE is a rotten paywall (Score:2)
IEEE is a rotten paywall and should be abolished.
Sounds like BS, but I think the writer screwed up (Score:1)
Yes, Marconi simply provided for varying the inductance. At low frequencies some floating turns have little effect. The coil is physically short in terms of wavelength and there isn't enough stray capacitance to get much resonant or non-resonant current flow through the floating leg.
In some cases people actually short out turns they don't want. That's seen mostly with silver-plated coils in transmitters, where resistance losses associated with the resulting circulating current are sufficiently low. The
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Did you just describe IF Strips without using the term?
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100 year old news? (Score:3)
Hey, people I don't know know if you are aware, but if you take a radar unit, drop the receiver and turn up the power, you can cook FOOD on it to!
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Really? That's really cool. I guess it's a RadaRange then?
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Excuse me but that sounds entirely implausible. Cooking food with a radar unit? I'll believe it when someone uses one to, say, melt a chocolate bar. Until then keep your loony theories to yourself!
Oh, it's quite possible... an APG-66 radar kit [wikipedia.org] (usually parked inside the radome of an F-16 jet fighter) can cook a hot dog placed 2' in front of the pitot tube in very short order once you flip it into active mode. That's why they usually point the jet's nose out somewhere big and empty when they test it, and then make damned sure no one walks within 150' of the jet's front during testing.
(hint: both the typical radar unit and microwave oven share one core component in common - a magnetron.)
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d'oh! I knew I heard a 'whoosh' somewhere...
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Maybe it was the broiled seagulls and pigeons around old WWII radar installations.....
Obviously (Score:5, Funny)
This means that Guglielmo Marconi's hard work was stolen without compensation and he has no incentive to invent anymore. Extends patents to 115 years!
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I'd suggest extending the Term to "when 1 divided through the age of the patent yields 0". No politician will realize what this means.
As long as you intend to use Integer Division, I'm with you!
Inductor? (Score:1)
I read that as Macaroni patent (Score:1, Interesting)
I was intrigued. But no, Marconi... that... that makes more sense.
have to admit... (Score:4, Interesting)
I read the title as "old macaroni patent" on first glance.
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And it's so ambiguous. Is that a patent on old pasta? a macaroni patent that expired? A patent inscribed on a tube of pasta? patent on fancy 18th century duds?
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Clearly, the patent is for sticking a feather in one's hat.
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And others... like Mahlon Loomis http://www.smecc.org/mhlon_loo... [smecc.org]
Marconi was an inventor and managed to get his device into the hands of others, but he wasn't the first.
Maxwell's equations fail? (Score:3)
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It's especially sad to see this from an IEEE publication (even spectrum).
First, the major unifying concept in Maxwell's equation was the displacement current, a quantity for the changing field in a dielectric with units as current density. This answers the age-old question, "how do you have a current circuit when one part (a capacitor) is clearly 'broken' and not conducting?" Maxwell was the first to answer the question with a solid theory. So a better way to write the sentence you quote would be, "Maxwell
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"Lens" is the common name for an antenna made of insulating material.
A load of BS (Score:2)
The patent detail has nothing to do with the subject. It's a variable coil that's depicted, signalized by the arrow cursor ( like a potentiometer, but a coil)
The article is marketing wank.
Wonder where he stole that idea from. (Score:2)