Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Engineering Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Electrical and Computer Engineering

PDF

Theses/Dissertations

2002

Radio wave propagation

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Determination Of The Possible Locations Of The Receiver On A Passive Coherent Location System, Considering The Effects Of The Terrain And The Atmospheric Conditions, Carlos A. Meier Mar 2002

Determination Of The Possible Locations Of The Receiver On A Passive Coherent Location System, Considering The Effects Of The Terrain And The Atmospheric Conditions, Carlos A. Meier

Theses and Dissertations

It has always been an issue for an armed force, or government, to obtain complete radar coverage over an area of interest. Generally, this objective remains unaccomplished due to geographical, technical, and/or operational reasons (meaning topographic obstacles, transmitted power, extreme isolation, hierarchy of objectives, etc.) The fact of having vast areas of territory beyond radar coverage can be decisive in an armed conflict. With the recent resurgence of bistatic radar theory and applications, now in the form of Passive Coherent Location (PCL) systems, using existing signal sources (TC and Radio Stations) it is possible to decrease the blind zones of …


Development And Characterization Of An Emergency Communications System Using Near Vertical Incident Skywave Antennas, Richard A. Allnutt Mar 2002

Development And Characterization Of An Emergency Communications System Using Near Vertical Incident Skywave Antennas, Richard A. Allnutt

Theses and Dissertations

The NVIS system characterized in this work was designed to eliminate skip propagation by optimizing the design for contiguous coverage. The NVIS technique involves use of transmission and receiving antennas that create nearly vertical propagation and continuous coverage from the transmitter to a distance of 200 miles. Man portable, very low power transceivers (5 watts maximum) and horizontal dipole antennas five feet above the ground are used in an NVIS communication system for this work. The system is designed for the purpose of supporting communication with emergency workers in areas where other communication is difficult. Digital and analog effectiveness are …