Are all antennas traveling wave antennas?

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Not all antennas are traveling wave antennas; many are standing wave antennas. Traveling wave antennas, like beverage and rhombic types, radiate energy in one direction, while standing wave antennas have waves traveling in both directions, leading to energy storage. The radiation from both types is a traveling electromagnetic wave, but their mechanisms differ, with traveling wave antennas being non-resonant and often providing wider bandwidths. Standing wave antennas are typically more efficient for specific frequency ranges due to their resonant nature. Understanding these distinctions is crucial for selecting the appropriate antenna type for various applications.
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Hi, I've been reading a lot about traveling and standing waves, and i am right now reading about traveling wave antennas, to my understanding ALL antennas should be traveling wave antennas, but this is not the case of what i read online, and there is also not too much information about it.

For instance, the wikipedia article states that the most common type of traveling wave antenna are the beverage and rhombic antenna.

I can't find much information about this, care to explain to me why? Is it because the propagation pattern of the wave has to meet some standards in order to be in the traveling wave category? Or are all antennas(like the ones in the microwave dishes and all others used in transmission and reception) really traveling wave antennas as i believe? and so are all waves(talking about radio waves in this case) that propagate traveling waves? Does modulation play any role here?

Thanks in advance
 
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Imagine the antenna wire is a transmission line driven from one end. As the electric wave passes each electron, it give it an acceleration, and this is what causes the radiation. When the wave reaches the end of the wire, it can be absorbed by a resistor or reflected. In the former case we have a traveling wave antenna - the wave travels only one way. But if the wire is open circuit at its end, the wave is reflected, and travels back along the wire the other way. As it does so, it again causes radiation as it passes each electron. The wire now has waves traveling in both directions, and the combined effect is to create a standing wave. The energy in the standing wave is stored energy, and if the transmitter is turned off, it will take a finite period of time for the energy to be lost. Most antennas are standing wave type, because there is no wasted energy in a terminating resistor.
 
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tech99 said:
Imagine the antenna wire is a transmission line driven from one end. As the electric wave passes each electron, it give it an acceleration, and this is what causes the radiation. When the wave reaches the end of the wire, it can be absorbed by a resistor or reflected. In the former case we have a traveling wave antenna - the wave travels only one way. But if the wire is open circuit at its end, the wave is reflected, and travels back along the wire the other way. As it does so, it again causes radiation as it passes each electron. The wire now has waves traveling in both directions, and the combined effect is to create a standing wave. The energy in the standing wave is stored energy, and if the transmitter is turned off, it will take a finite period of time for the energy to be lost. Most antennas are standing wave type, because there is no wasted energy in a terminating resistor.

Hi, and thank you really much for your explanation, now i understand. But this makes me rise new questions. Before, in my mind, i thought all the antennas were traveling wave type because that's what they radiate, right? The radiation of all antennas is a traveling wave, since they radiate waves that travel through space. Am i right with this assumption? Is the radiation on a traveling wave antenna the same as on the standing wave antenna?

I didn't know that what makes a traveling wave antenna is the way the wave propagates on the wire itself.

Thank you again!
 
The EM wave that is radiated from an antenna is a traveling wave, whether the antenna is a standing wave or traveling wave type. (By the way, it is possible to have standing EM waves, if, for example, there is a sheet of reflecting metal near the antenna or if you radiate the wave into a metal box).
 
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tech99 said:
The EM wave that is radiated from an antenna is a traveling wave, whether the antenna is a standing wave or traveling wave type. (By the way, it is possible to have standing EM waves, if, for example, there is a sheet of reflecting metal near the antenna or if you radiate the wave into a metal box).

Alright, thank you!
One last question, are both of them used for the same purposes? Or are there uses that one would work better at than the other would? If we're explicitly talking about them being travelingwave and standingwave
 
@richjtf
its a pity you didn't continue to quote the wiki article stating the difference in the traveling wave antenna and non-travelling wave antenna ...

Their distinguishing feature is that the radio-frequency current that generates the radio waves travels through the antenna in one direction. This is in contrast to a resonant antenna, such as the monopole or dipole, in which the antenna acts as a resonator, with radio currents traveling in both directions, bouncing back and forth between the ends of the antenna.

because therein lay the answer to your question :wink:

cheers
Dave
 
davenn said:
@richjtf
its a pity you didn't continue to quote the wiki article stating the difference in the traveling wave antenna and non-travelling wave antenna ...

because therein lay the answer to your question :wink:

cheers
Dave

ahaha, you got me. I read that, but i didn't quite get it, nor why does it do it. The answers tech99 gave me cleared every doubt out
 
richjtf said:
Or are there uses that one would work better at than the other would?

that was also answered :wink:

An advantage of traveling wave antennas is that since they are nonresonant they often have a wider bandwidth than resonant antennas.

personally for most of my radio work, I prefer resonant antennas ... there are ways to make them wideband
for instance I have a log periodic yagi that is resonant from 2 to 12 GHz :) ... that's pretty spectacular bandwidth !
 
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davenn said:
that was also answered :wink:

personally for most of my radio work, I prefer resonant antennas ... there are ways to male them wideband
for instance I have a log periodic yagi that is resonant from 2 to 12 GHz :) ... that's pretty spectacular bandwidth !

Thanks for pointing that out. I want to understand the topic widely, every time i get home from work college i sit down and read for as long as i can. I want to learn as much about antennas as i possibly can. Any good book or site where i can find nice information? I've learned about and made half wave length dipoles only, so far..
 
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richjtf said:
I want to learn as much about antennas as i possibly can. Any good book or site where i can find nice information?

A VERY good source that is reasonably easy reading is the ARRL Antenna Handbook
 
  • #11
You
richjtf said:
Alright, thank you!
One last question, are both of them used for the same purposes? Or are there uses that one would work better at than the other would? If we're explicitly talking about them being travelingwave and standingwave
You may have seen standing waves on a guitar string. The string is tuned to one frequency, so standing wave antennas tend to be best over a small range of frequencies. Often the antenna is about half a wavelength long for the frequency being used.
A traveling wave antenna can work over a wide range of frequencies, but it must be very long so that most of the energy is radiated it reaches the terminating resistor.
If there is space, a traveling wave antenna can be a simple way of making a directional antenna, as the waves tend to be radiated in the direction towards the resistor.
 
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tech99 said:
You

You may have seen standing waves on a guitar string. The string is tuned to one frequency, so standing wave antennas tend to be best over a small range of frequencies. Often the antenna is about half a wavelength long for the frequency being used.
A traveling wave antenna can work over a wide range of frequencies, but it must be very long so that most of the energy is radiated it reaches the terminating resistor.
If there is space, a traveling wave antenna can be a simple way of making a directional antenna, as the waves tend to be radiated in the direction towards the resistor.

That made a lot of sense to me, thank you. I don't really want to continue bothering you since you've helped me so much already, but i that made me rise a new question, and i don't think want to make a new post.

In my mind I'm picturing both, traveling wave antenna, and the standing wave antenna. In my mind the traveling wave antenna charges change because of course, the electric current is AC. So that creates a changing electric field which creates a changing magnetic field and so on so it radiates.

Then i picture a standing wave antenna, the current wave reflects at the end of the antenna creating a standing wave, which of course changes amplitude meaning charges change their polarity, i don't quite picture it the same way of the traveling antenna, but this is as well happens of course because of the AC source.

Could i say that both type of antennas radiate the same way, because of the same reasons? I found myself talking to a friend of mine explained the new knowledge i had gained, and he couldn't understand why standingwave antennas radiate. I explained it to him the same way i just put it down, but he still didn't quite get it. It's easy to get confused because of the standingwave, name.
 
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richjtf said:
That made a lot of sense to me, thank you. I don't really want to continue bothering you since you've helped me so much already, but i that made me rise a new question, and i don't think want to make a new post.

In my mind I'm picturing both, traveling wave antenna, and the standing wave antenna. In my mind the traveling wave antenna charges change because of course, the electric current is AC. So that creates a changing electric field which creates a changing magnetic field and so on so it radiates.

Then i picture a standing wave antenna, the current wave reflects at the end of the antenna creating a standing wave, which of course changes amplitude meaning charges change their polarity, i don't quite picture it the same way of the traveling antenna, but this is as well happens of course because of the AC source.

Could i say that both type of antennas radiate the same way, because of the same reasons? I found myself talking to a friend of mine explained the new knowledge i had gained, and he couldn't understand why standingwave antennas radiate. I explained it to him the same way i just put it down, but he still didn't quite get it. It's easy to get confused because of the standingwave, name.
There are two things at work with antennas. First, we drive it as a transmission line, so a wave travels along it. As this wave passes an electron in the wire, it gives it a brief acceleration. This makes it radiate. For a standing wave antenna, the mechanism is the same; there are transmission line waves in both directions, which we can consider separately. Each causes an electron to have a burst of acceleration and radiate.
 
  • #14
tech99 said:
causes an electron to have a burst of acceleration and radiate

Actually, it is a smoothly varying sinusoidal acceleration in both cases, no? :smile:
 
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