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EM.Terrano

10 bytes added, 15:18, 10 June 2013
/* Defining Transmitter Sets */
=== Defining Transmitter Sets ===
A short dipole is the closest thing to an omni-directional radiator. The direction or orientation of the short dipole determines its polarization. In many applications, you may rather want to use a directional antenna for your transmitter. You can model a radiating structure using EM.Cube's FDTD, Planar, MoM3D or PO modules and generate a 3D radiation pattern data file for it. These data are stored in a specially formatted file with a &quot;'''.RAD'''&quot; extension, which contains columns of spherical f &phi; and ? &theta; angles as well as the real and imaginary parts of the complex-valued far field components '''E<sub>?</sub>''' and '''E<sub>f</sub>'''. The ?- and f-components of the far-zone electric field determine the polarization of the transmitting radiator.
To define a directional transmitter radiator, you need to select the &quot;User Defined&quot; option in the &quot;Radiator&quot; section of the Transmitter Dialog. You can do this either at the time of creating a transmitter set, or afterwards by opening the property dialog of the transmitter set. In the &quot;Custom Pattern Parameters&quot;, click the '''Import Pattern''' button to set the path for the radiation data file. This opens up the standard Windows Open dialog, with the default file type or extension set to &quot;.RAD&quot;. Browse your folders to find the right data file. A radiation pattern file usually contains the value of &quot;Total Radiated Power&quot; in its file header. This is used by default for power calculations in the SBR simulation. However, you can check the box labeled &quot;'''Custom Power'''&quot; and enter a value for the transmitter power in Watts. EM.Cube can also rotate the imported radiation pattern arbitrarily. In this case, you need to specify the '''Rotation''' angles in degrees about the X-, Y- and Z-axes. Note that these rotations are performed sequentially and in order: first a rotation about the X-axis, then a rotation about the Y-axis, and finally a rotation about the Z-axis.
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