Diffraction of Waves through a circular aperture

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the power intensity of waves diffracted through a circular aperture, specifically in the context of electromagnetic waves passing through a Faraday's cage. The Airy diffraction pattern is referenced as a known result, but no direct formula for intensity is provided due to the complexity of factors involved. A user shares their experimental approach of testing a phone's signal reception through a hole in a metal box, seeking a way to quantify the intensity of waves entering the cage. Suggestions include measuring the phone's sensitivity and using a monopole antenna for voltage measurement, while also considering advanced methods like periodic mode-matching wave solvers for estimating transmitted power. The conversation highlights the challenges of calculating wave intensity in practical scenarios involving diffraction and shielding.
mrh1192
Messages
5
Reaction score
0
Hi

I was just wondering if anyone knew a forumla for calculating the power intensity of waves, when diffracted through a circular aperture?

I have searched all over the net, but cannot find one which solves for the power intensity of the wave directly.
 
Science news on Phys.org
The far-field diffraction pattern is a well known result [J1(kr)/kr]- what are you having a problem with?
 
Thanks guys

What I am trying to apply this to, is the calculation of the wave intensity of an electromagnetic wave when it passes through a Faraday's cage, which is unable to successfully shield from all radiation.

In testing this, I have placed a phone inside a metal box, and slowly increased the size of a single hole in the box, until the phone started to ring.

Now that I have obtained the diameter of the hole necessary, I was wondering if it was possible to calculate the intensity of the waves that were passing into the cage.
 
That's very clever- mind if I use that for a lab someday?

The easiest thing to do is simply find out the sensitivity of the phone- what signal level does it need to operate?
 
Sure, go ahead!

I assume that the phone will operate with any signal level, as long as it isn't zero.

Is there a simplified expression that solves directly for the intensity of the waves, that you know of?
 
Not for your situation- there's too many effects.
 
mrh1192 said:
I assume that the phone will operate with any signal level, as long as it isn't zero.
I highly doubt this! I can in no way justify my claim, but I would find it very odd if an extremely weak signal could make the phone operate.

You should at least try it with different phone models to see if it makes a difference.
 
Nick89 said:
I highly doubt this! I can in no way justify my claim, but I would find it very odd if an extremely weak signal could make the phone operate.

You should at least try it with different phone models to see if it makes a difference.

Yeah, why not just make a monopole antenna and measure the voltage off of it? All you need is a copper plate and a coax cable. If you want to calculate the leaked the radiation, one thing you can do is use a periodic mode-matching wave solver. You can estimate the cage as mesh of rectangular cylinders with a finite conductivity. You can then solve for the transmitted modes and add up the significant contributors to estimate the transmitted power. This will ignore leakage due to seams and imperfect connections and such though.
 

Similar threads

Back
Top