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Radio wave Propagation
Radio Wave Transmission
- Radio waves propagate or travel as Ionospheric and Non-ionospheric propagation
- Ionospheric layer is found in the upper levels of stratosphere in atmosphere
- Radio waves travel or propagate with or without use of Ionosphere
- Non-Ionospheric propagation takes place without use of ionosphere
- Ionospheric propagation takes place using the ionospheric layer
Non Ionospheric Propagation
- Non-Ionospheric propagation does not pass through Ionosphere
- Ground waves propagate without passing through Ionosphere
- Ground waves are sub-divided into Surface and Space waves
Surface Waves
- Low, Medium and High Frequency waves from 20 KHz – 50 MHz travel as surface waves
- Normally 20 KHz to 2 MHz frequencies are used for aviation purposes
- LF, MF and HF waves have less atmospheric and surface attenuation
- High diffraction enables surface waves to bend around the earth’s surface
- Surface waves are used in Long range NDB and Long distance communication
Space Waves
- VHF and UHF waves greater than 50 MHz have very less diffraction and propagate as Space waves
- Maximum range of ground waves is given by the line of sight formula
- Range in NM is equal to 1.23 times the sum of square roots of heights of transmitter and receiver
- Space waves are sub-divided into Direct and Ground reflected waves
- Direct waves travel as per the Line of sight principle from transmitter to receiver
- Ground reflected waves are received after reflection from obstacles which could cause an error in navigational equipments
Ionosphere
- Ionospheric layer is found in the upper levels of stratosphere in atmosphere
- Consists of negatively charged free electrons due to ionized gasses
- Ionisation is the process of ejecting electrons from an atom
- Ionospheric propagation involves passes through Ionospheric layer
- Direct and Sky waves are types of Ionospheric propagation
Layers of Ionosphere
- Ionosphere exists in D, E and F bands or layers
- Kennely or D layer is found at an average height of 75 km over earth and has low ionization levels
- Therefore, D Layer and is capable of refracting only lower frequencies
- Heavyside or E layer is found at an average height of 125 km over earth and has medium ionization levels
- E layer is capable of refracting up to 10 MHz frequencies
- Appleton or F layer is found at an average height of 225 km over earth and has high ionization levels
- High levels of ionisation in F layer is capable of refracting up to 3 MHz frequencies
Variation in Ionosphere
- Height and intensity of the ionosphere varies on seasons as well as time of day
- Intense ionisation is found at the centre of D, E and F layers
- D layer forms at sunrise and disappears at sunset
- E layer reduces in altitude at sunrise and increases in altitude after sunset
- F layer splits into two at sunrise and rejoins at sunset
- Altitude of F1 reduce below F layer at sunrise
- Altitude of F2 layer is dependent on time of year
- In summers, F2 increases in altitude up to 400 Km
- In winters, F2 remains at approximately same at 225 Km
Ionospheric Attenuation and Refraction
- Collisions between wave particles and free electrons causes Ionospheric Attenuation and Refraction
- Ionospheric Refraction cause some of the waves to return to ground that can be useful in Radio Navigation
- Ionospheric attenuation is higher in lower frequencies and increases with increase in Solar Radiation
Sky Waves
- Radio waves returning back to earth on refraction by the ionospheric layer are called as Sky waves
- Sky waves are possible in LF, MF ad HF bands within the frequency range of 2 to 50 MHz
Critical Angle and Critical Frequency
- The distance a sky wave returns to earth is determined by its frequency and transmission angle
- Critical angle is the minimum transmission angle for return of sky wave of a certain frequency
- Transmission at less than the critical angle would make the waves to exit the atmosphere as Escape Rays
- Critical angle is dependent on Ionisation levels and Frequency of wave
- Critical angle increases with Frequency and reduces with Ionisation Levels
- Critical frequency is the lowest usable frequency for a given critical angle
- Higher ionisation levels increase critical frequency for a certain critical angle
Maximum Usable Frequency
- Maximum usable frequency is the highest usable frequency for High Frequency Radio (HF Radio)
- High ionisation levels at noon results in higher Maximum Usable Frequencies
- MUF has minimum attenuation and static interference since it travels the shortest path through the ionosphere
- HF Radio Transmission at frequencies higher than MUF will form escape rays and will not return to earth
Optimum Working Frequency
- OWF is derived from MUF in order to ensure that the transmission does not exceed MUF due to ionospheric fluctuations
- Optimum working frequency is 0.85 times the Maximum Usable Frequency
- HF Radio transmission frequencies are halved at night due to low ionisation levels
Skip Distance and Dead Space
- Skip distance is the distance from transmitter to first returning sky wave
- Higher ionisation levels reduce skip distance while higher Frequency or refraction layer increases skip distance
- Dead Space is the distance from Surface wave range to the Skip distance
- Since the range of surface wave is constant, dead space reduces with decrease in skip distance
Multi Hop Propagation
- Multi-hop propagation unexpectedly increase the range of sky waves in high power transmissions
- Reflection of sky waves back to the ionosphere causes multi-hop propagation
- Ground Based Transmitters transmit tangential to earth in order to maximise sky wave range
Sky Waves at Night
- Sky wave propagation in LF, MF and HF bands vary between day and night
- During day, low powered sky waves vanish due to absorption by D layer
- At night, sky waves refracted by E layer are unusable due to weak signals
- Range of sky waves increase at night but interfere with the same surface wave resulting in incorrect direction indications
Fading and Multi Path Fading
- Increasing and decreasing signal quality in received signal due to same wave received by two paths is called Fading
- Fading is caused due to weak signal strength as a result of higher distances, low power, weather and terrain
- Multi-path fading is due to out of phase reception of sky and surface wave of same signal
- Multi-path fading can be overcome by frequency or space diversity
- Frequency diversity is the use of different frequencies for transmission and reception
- Space diversity by using two or more antenna for reception in large aircrafts
Best of luck
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