On the Complete Radiation Pattern of a Vertical Hertzian Dipole Above a Low-Loss Ground

The complete radiation field pattern of a vertical Hertzian dipole antenna on or above a lossless or low-loss dielectric half-space is studied using a rigorous Sommerfeld formalism. The reflected fields in the air above the interface and the subsurface fields transmitted into the dielectric are comp...

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Main Authors: Krzysztof A. Michalski, Juan R. Mosig
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2021-01-01
Series:IEEE Journal of Microwaves
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9464088/
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spelling doaj-6e69faa40a59493caba2a536a6b5210a2021-09-13T14:12:27ZengIEEEIEEE Journal of Microwaves2692-83882021-01-011374776210.1109/JMW.2021.30849479464088On the Complete Radiation Pattern of a Vertical Hertzian Dipole Above a Low-Loss GroundKrzysztof A. Michalski0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5753-7333Juan R. Mosig1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0285-5323Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USAÉcole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, SwitzerlandThe complete radiation field pattern of a vertical Hertzian dipole antenna on or above a lossless or low-loss dielectric half-space is studied using a rigorous Sommerfeld formalism. The reflected fields in the air above the interface and the subsurface fields transmitted into the dielectric are computed by numerical integration of the Sommerfeld integrals. Furthermore, to facilitate the physical interpretation of these results, a detailed asymptotic saddle-point integration method analysis is presented, which includes terms that vary in magnitude with the second power of the inverse distance from the dipole. It is shown that the second-order field constituents are dominant at the interface, where the first-order geometrical fields vanish. These second-order terms comprise an evanescent wave propagating along the interface in the upper half-space and a lateral wave, also known as the head wave, which propagates in the subsurface along the direction of the critical angle. The two waves only exist between two cones whose half-angles are equal to the critical angle, and their interference with the geometrical-optics fields determines the radiation pattern for elevation angles near the horizon. The far zone surface fields on either side of the interface comprise two second order waves that propagate along the interface, one with the phase velocity in the air, and the other with the phase velocity in the dielectric. Away from the interface, the leading field components vary with the first power of the inverse distance, which explains the sharp dip in the field pattern at the interface—a phenomenon known as the interface pattern extinction. Another distinctive phenomenon, observed in the subsurface field pattern, is the rippling that occurs in the angular range between the critical angle cone and the interface. The asymptotic analysis has shown that this pattern scalloping results from the interference of the lateral wave with the geometrical-optics spherical wave.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9464088/Dipole antennasantenna radiation patternsinterface pattern extinctiondielectric half-spaceSommerfeld integralssaddle-point integration method
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Krzysztof A. Michalski
Juan R. Mosig
spellingShingle Krzysztof A. Michalski
Juan R. Mosig
On the Complete Radiation Pattern of a Vertical Hertzian Dipole Above a Low-Loss Ground
IEEE Journal of Microwaves
Dipole antennas
antenna radiation patterns
interface pattern extinction
dielectric half-space
Sommerfeld integrals
saddle-point integration method
author_facet Krzysztof A. Michalski
Juan R. Mosig
author_sort Krzysztof A. Michalski
title On the Complete Radiation Pattern of a Vertical Hertzian Dipole Above a Low-Loss Ground
title_short On the Complete Radiation Pattern of a Vertical Hertzian Dipole Above a Low-Loss Ground
title_full On the Complete Radiation Pattern of a Vertical Hertzian Dipole Above a Low-Loss Ground
title_fullStr On the Complete Radiation Pattern of a Vertical Hertzian Dipole Above a Low-Loss Ground
title_full_unstemmed On the Complete Radiation Pattern of a Vertical Hertzian Dipole Above a Low-Loss Ground
title_sort on the complete radiation pattern of a vertical hertzian dipole above a low-loss ground
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Journal of Microwaves
issn 2692-8388
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The complete radiation field pattern of a vertical Hertzian dipole antenna on or above a lossless or low-loss dielectric half-space is studied using a rigorous Sommerfeld formalism. The reflected fields in the air above the interface and the subsurface fields transmitted into the dielectric are computed by numerical integration of the Sommerfeld integrals. Furthermore, to facilitate the physical interpretation of these results, a detailed asymptotic saddle-point integration method analysis is presented, which includes terms that vary in magnitude with the second power of the inverse distance from the dipole. It is shown that the second-order field constituents are dominant at the interface, where the first-order geometrical fields vanish. These second-order terms comprise an evanescent wave propagating along the interface in the upper half-space and a lateral wave, also known as the head wave, which propagates in the subsurface along the direction of the critical angle. The two waves only exist between two cones whose half-angles are equal to the critical angle, and their interference with the geometrical-optics fields determines the radiation pattern for elevation angles near the horizon. The far zone surface fields on either side of the interface comprise two second order waves that propagate along the interface, one with the phase velocity in the air, and the other with the phase velocity in the dielectric. Away from the interface, the leading field components vary with the first power of the inverse distance, which explains the sharp dip in the field pattern at the interface—a phenomenon known as the interface pattern extinction. Another distinctive phenomenon, observed in the subsurface field pattern, is the rippling that occurs in the angular range between the critical angle cone and the interface. The asymptotic analysis has shown that this pattern scalloping results from the interference of the lateral wave with the geometrical-optics spherical wave.
topic Dipole antennas
antenna radiation patterns
interface pattern extinction
dielectric half-space
Sommerfeld integrals
saddle-point integration method
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9464088/
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