Loop Antennas vs. B-Probes: Similarities and Differences

AI Thread Summary
Loop antennas operate in the far field, while B-probes function in the near field, leading to differences in energy flow and circuit design. Loop antennas extract maximum power from magnetic fields, which can distort the local field, whereas B-probes minimize current to reduce their influence on the field. Both devices share similar standard features, such as antenna factor and impedance matching, but their applications differ. B-probes can be simple coils or utilize Hall Effect sensors for sensing AC and DC magnetic fields. Understanding these distinctions is crucial for selecting the appropriate tool for magnetic field measurement.
Massi
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Hi
the difference between a loop antenna and a magnetic probe (B-Probe) is only that the loop antenna works in far field and B-Probe works in near field? The standard features of magnetic antenna (antenna factor, impedance matching, radiation patterns, efficiency, ecc) have the same definition in the case of the B-Probe?
Thanks !
Regards
Massi
 
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Welcome to PF.
A loop antenna and a B-probe differ in the external circuit and so in the flow of energy.
The loop antenna extracts the maximum power from the magnetic field and so significantly distorts the local field.
The B-probe senses the voltage induced on the loop, while minimising the current. That reduces the influence of the probe on the field.
 
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Massi said:
Hi
the difference between a loop antenna and a magnetic probe (B-Probe) is only that the loop antenna works in far field and B-Probe works in near field? The standard features of magnetic antenna (antenna factor, impedance matching, radiation patterns, efficiency, ecc) have the same definition in the case of the B-Probe?
Thanks !
Regards
Massi
Welcome to the PF.

In addition to Baluncore's comments, keep in mind that there are two different kinds of B-Field probes. The simplest is a small coil that is used to sense AC magnetic fields. It may be a single turn, shielded loop probe, or it can also consist of a number of turns for higher sensitivity (at the expense of lower bandwidth). But to sense DC and AC magnetic fields, a Hall Effect sensor is generally used. Does that make sense?
 
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ok I see, thank you!
massi
 
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