Miss Amy said:
1. Does it take more electrical energy to transmit HF and lower frequencies than it takes to transmit VHF and above?
Not as far as I know. Huge transmitters are typically used for the submarine communications at ELF and VLF but I think that's because they're trying to generate a signal that will travel around the world.
Miss Amy said:
2. Are there any wavelengths beyond radio waves and gamma rays?
No. Radio waves are the name for everything at the low frequency end of the spectrum, and gamma rays are the name for everything at the high end.
Miss Amy said:
3. Is it true that the lower the frequency, the lower the amount of data that's being sent? I read on
this wiki that military submarines can only send around 300 bit/s – or about 35 eight-bit ASCII characters per second when sending in ELF, and a few characters per minute when sent in ELF. Is there a chart or an article somewhere showing if there's any relation?
It's mostly because of bandwidth. A signal doesn't occupy just one frequency, it occupies a range of frequencies. Roughly speaking, the bandwidth is on the same order as the data rate. For instance, frequencies in the FM band (with numbers like 90.9 or 105.3) are spaced at intervals of 0.2 MHz or 200 kHz. They can accommodate a data rate of about that size without interfering with each other.
But if your base frequency is only 10 kHz, you can't fit a 200 kHz bandwidth around that. Your bandwidth is going to be more like 1 kHz or so, and so that's your data rate.
Miss Amy said:
4. If I have an antenna that's ~1cm, will it still be able to pick up and send HF and lower signals?
Yes, just not very efficiently. The signal levels will be lower.
Miss Amy said:
5. Isotropic antennas can't really be achieved, but what types of antennas are most like isotropic anyway?
Whip antennas (single vertical piece of metal) give an omnidirectional pattern which is uniform in all horizontal directions and has a pretty good spread vertically.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omnidirectional_antenna
I think I've seen omnidirectional antenna specs with gains of about 2 dB, which translates to about a 60 degree vertical beamwidth. Gain and directionality are related. Gain is power relative to isotropic power. So a gain of 10 dB, a factor of 10 above isotropic, is achieved by limiting the energy to 1/10 of the sphere. A perfectly isotropic antenna would have a gain of 0 dB.
I'm no antenna expert. If you search on "low gain antenna" you'll find antennas designed to be nearly isotropic. I just did that and saw a picture of a drone, which reminds me that drones are one application where you need these. It needs to be able to talk to the home base in any direction.