Outstanding video. I plan to require my employees (who are not trained technicians) to view this to give them a few more things to think about. I've had a ham license for 53 years and have been in the two-way and broadcast services industry for 42 years. I've been in business 31 years and I didn't know about the "solar winds" night time effect on the Ionosphere. There's always some thing new to learn before we ending up leaving this rock.
water blocks radio signal is not true. actually water carries rf further. when ever i go beside a river or lake or sea i get stronger signal than other places. i think they need a more to discover
This video is really great. I am astrophysicist (working in optical and infra-red astronomy) who will go observe soon with a large radio telescope, thus I needed to learn as much as possible about radio stuff (telescopes, antenna, polarization, receivers,...). This video really helps. Thanks!!
What happens to the electrical signal as it reaches the radio wave? Does it generates a high frequency electrical signals and low voltage or maybe I'm mistaken?
Fantastic vid. I was trained in Strategic Microwave Communications Systems Repair (26V20) years ago in the Army. Late 70s. They never had a vid as clear as this. Sure would have helped. Now I teach Middle School Science, and when we get to the sections on Energy, Electricity and Magnetism, I use vids like these to get the principles across to the kids. Thank you for taking the time to create and share this vid.
For explanatory purposes, I like the optical engineer's view of RF; photons coming off the antenna in response to the varying AC driving voltage. As the driving voltage builds, it excites the conduction electrons into a higher orbit, and when it drops the electrons return to a more stable orbit, releasing their energy in the form of a photon at the frequency of the driving voltage. The photons, traveling from the antenna, are picked up by the receiving antenna and induce a voltage in the antenna elements.
11:02 is what makes world wide radio contacts a regular thing for Amateurs and Broadcast stations. It's a bit more complicated than presented here and many more factors play into it. The lower frequencies are more predictable and the higher ones can be "magic" hence the "Magic Band" of 6 meters (50-54mHz in USA). Enhanced propagation is what makes things exciting on the amateur bands.
I get it. You are matching antenna geometry to a holographic radio image in space to tune the frequency in space. Capacitance, reflectance and phase make space. Excellent video.
As a young ham i used to love 'sporadic E' some summer nights to talk up to 100's km's on my 2 metre homebrew. The E layer in the ionoshere sometimes ionizes in a way that VHF signals would bounce off it thereby effectively lengthening the horizon, sometimes for seconds or minutes occasionally for hours lol. In the 1970's govt's published prediction tables for HF propagation over DX, as different bands fron 3 to 30mhz would bounce repeately at different times. This enabled os staff to warm up the next Tx ready for opening, to keep those RTTY's going. Music to my ears!
I searched through numerous videos looking to understand radio waves and antenna length and by far this is the best video I found. Thank you so much for making this video!!
This is also one of the best videos about radio in general and broadcast in particular that I have seen. I already took a few screen shots of it for a presentation that I made about radio relay systems for a sales colleague. I am RF system specialist, engineer and long time licensed ham as OZ7ACS too. I am trying to teach electronics and RF to my son and then I stumbled upon this excellent video. Keep up the good work and please make more videos like this one about more subjects within RF and antennas!
This one single video is more informative than hundreds of articles about radiowaves I've ever read! I had no idea that radio waves had polarity! Thanx a lot!
Not sure about anyone else. This was very helpful on understanding how to use my RC to pilot my drone much farther I didn't understand that I had to be pointing my flat panels at the craft.
Excellent , the best explanation I have ever seen . I'm an ignoramus when it come to how radio works . And you have helped me a lot to understand how it works . Thank you for posting !
The tallest antenna was the Warsaw antella at 2,120 feet, but it collapsed. Today, the tallest antenna is the Tokyo Skytree antenna at 2,080 feet. In Ontario, Canada, the CN Tower, standing at 1,815 feet, is an antenna that also serves as an observation tower for people. The smallest antenna is only 14 mm by 11 mm. This was a great video. They should have mentioned the layers of the atmosphere, identified by capital letters (D, E, F1 and F2, increasing in height in the ionosphere), which reflect radio waves, and are different between day and night. For example, only during the night does the D layer reflect back to Earth SW radio waves, such as 2 meters to 80 meters, used for continuous-wave communication (Morse Code) by radio (Ham) operators. Frank Reiser M.S. KB2VNG Frank Reiser Video/Audio Service Caldwell, NJ., U.S.A. (973) 226-3476
I believe the crossed polarity as you've described is "dual polarity". Circular polarity is when the horizontal and vertical signals are out of phase and create a rotation in the polarity. A spin stabilized satellite most clearly demonstrates how circular polarization works. This WIKI has an excellent graphic and explanation: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circular_polarization
I have looked all over the place for some explanation about radio polarization. Especially what circular polarization is. Never would've thought i'd find the answer in a youtube video. Very detailed information in your video, thank you very much.
Excellent video, narration and animationns! This is EXTEMELY helpful for me to send to my sons who I am getting into Ham / Amateur radio! Thanks so much and keep them comming! :)
Brilliant! This is the best informational video I have ever watched on you tube! Very easy to understand!!! Radio waves have been difficult for me to grasp but this video helped me under stand soooooo much! Thank you sooooooo much!
Dishes are used for very high frequencies, in the Gigahertz. The parabolic shape of the dish focuses the high frequencies into a very tight beam, this allows almost all the energy to be directed in one direction. When receiving the dish again focuses the received signal and amplifies it. Dishes work with both horizontal, vertical and circular polarized RF.
Just as an additional note - EM waves may be harmful if the radiation intensity is large enough (so-called "thermal effects"), but the health effects when exposed to EM waves also depends on the characteristics of the waveform which is transmitted. A number of studies have been performed to research the effects of EM waves, particularly with center frequencies used in cellular and Wi-Fi, combined with the actual waveforms to determine whether the exposure has any effect on mammalian health. Some of these studies have shown that these particular center frequencies and waveforms are coupled to e.g. VGCC activation in cells - but don't take my word for it - go ahead and read the research papers!
Awesome, very informative. I have got many answers to the questions that i used to think when i was a kid haha. Thanks for sharing and making this wonderful and informative visualization about Radio Waves.
I am glad you and your students found my video tutorial useful. Thanks for your kind words. Russ
The earth is flat. The idea that radio waves would need a curved earth to propagate makes no sense.
If you're interested in radio, this is the best video I've found to start out.
@صادق حسن التميمي البصراوي aáataayaáyÁpyyaytyyayuay9yyayaaayytaayaytyy0yytólotáóoķoä7ttýatyayaaaaaaaáyaĺñkljjlmvmbmblb00ápa
Outstanding video. I plan to require my employees (who are not trained technicians) to view this to give them a few more things to think about. I've had a ham license for 53 years and have been in the two-way and broadcast services industry for 42 years. I've been in business 31 years and I didn't know about the "solar winds" night time effect on the Ionosphere. There's always some thing new to learn before we ending up leaving this rock.
water blocks radio signal is not true. actually water carries rf further. when ever i go beside a river or lake or sea i get stronger signal than other places. i think they need a more to discover
asif iqbaL paLash That's because the signal bounces off the water's surface. It cannot penetrate the water very much.
then why i my music volume on radio get stronger while i am beside a river...
i observed similar incident in many places.
FM - 11-666
a must watch video for everyone trying to get into RF. many basic topics clearly explained. thank you !!
Agreed
I know it's a lot to learn but this is the first step for people to understand how 5G works instead of being afraid of it.
This video is really great. I am astrophysicist (working in optical and infra-red astronomy) who will go observe soon with a large radio telescope, thus I needed to learn as much as possible about radio stuff (telescopes, antenna, polarization, receivers,...). This video really helps. Thanks!!
What happens to the electrical signal as it reaches the radio wave? Does it generates a high frequency electrical signals and low voltage or maybe I'm mistaken?
Fantastic vid. I was trained in Strategic Microwave Communications Systems Repair (26V20) years ago in the Army. Late 70s. They never had a vid as clear as this. Sure would have helped. Now I teach Middle School Science, and when we get to the sections on Energy, Electricity and Magnetism, I use vids like these to get the principles across to the kids. Thank you for taking the time to create and share this vid.
For explanatory purposes, I like the optical engineer's view of RF; photons coming off the antenna in response to the varying AC driving voltage. As the driving voltage builds, it excites the conduction electrons into a higher orbit, and when it drops the electrons return to a more stable orbit, releasing their energy in the form of a photon at the frequency of the driving voltage. The photons, traveling from the antenna, are picked up by the receiving antenna and induce a voltage in the antenna elements.
11:02 is what makes world wide radio contacts a regular thing for Amateurs and Broadcast stations. It's a bit more complicated than presented here and many more factors play into it. The lower frequencies are more predictable and the higher ones can be "magic" hence the "Magic Band" of 6 meters (50-54mHz in USA). Enhanced propagation is what makes things exciting on the amateur bands.
I get it. You are matching antenna geometry to a holographic radio image in space to tune the frequency in space. Capacitance, reflectance and phase make space. Excellent video.
Absolutely the best qualitative antenna video out there. You hit all the main points.
Brilliant video. Don't know why anyone would not like this.
As a young ham i used to love 'sporadic E' some summer nights to talk up to 100's km's on my 2 metre homebrew. The E layer in the ionoshere sometimes ionizes in a way that VHF signals would bounce off it thereby effectively lengthening the horizon, sometimes for seconds or minutes occasionally for hours lol. In the 1970's govt's published prediction tables for HF propagation over DX, as different bands fron 3 to 30mhz would bounce repeately at different times. This enabled os staff to warm up the next Tx ready for opening, to keep those RTTY's going. Music to my ears!
The best video about this issue I have saw. Congrats!
Agreed...a fine basic intro to terms and good simple graphics.
I searched through numerous videos looking to understand radio waves and antenna length and by far this is the best video I found. Thank you so much for making this video!!
This is also one of the best videos about radio in general and broadcast in particular that I have seen. I already took a few screen shots of it for a presentation that I made about radio relay systems for a sales colleague. I am RF system specialist, engineer and long time licensed ham as OZ7ACS too. I am trying to teach electronics and RF to my son and then I stumbled upon this excellent video. Keep up the good work and please make more videos like this one about more subjects within RF and antennas!
Outstanding! It’s unimaginable that the radio frequency waves travel at the same speed as the speed of light. Thanks for all this Good information.
This one single video is more informative than hundreds of articles about radiowaves I've ever read! I had no idea that radio waves had polarity! Thanx a lot!
simple and sharpen explanations ... Very good
73
Excellent ! thank you for sharing this
Not sure about anyone else. This was very helpful on understanding how to use my RC to pilot my drone much farther I didn't understand that I had to be pointing my flat panels at the craft.
a brief but lucid tutorial. thank you for posting it.
Excellent , the best explanation I have ever seen . I'm an ignoramus when it come to how radio works . And you have helped me a lot to understand how it works . Thank you for posting !
This is an EXCELLENT educational video. My only suggestion two 7+ minutes long Parts 1 & 2. Thank you.
This video was really helpful. Instead of reading about radio wave watching this video was much worth. I wish it could have been in much deeper way.
This is better than all the ham technician study vids.
This is best video on radio that I have ever seen. Excellent work!
Came for clear information, received clear information. Thanks for making me smarter today.
so simple, yet so helpful ... thnx!
The tallest antenna was the Warsaw antella at 2,120 feet, but it collapsed. Today, the tallest antenna is the Tokyo Skytree antenna at 2,080 feet. In Ontario, Canada, the CN Tower, standing at 1,815 feet, is an antenna that also serves as an observation tower for people. The smallest antenna is only 14 mm by 11 mm. This was a great video. They should have mentioned the layers of the atmosphere, identified by capital letters (D, E, F1 and F2, increasing in height in the ionosphere), which reflect radio waves, and are different between day and night. For example, only during the night does the D layer reflect back to Earth SW radio waves, such as 2 meters to 80 meters, used for continuous-wave communication (Morse Code) by radio (Ham) operators.
Frank Reiser M.S. KB2VNG
Frank Reiser Video/Audio Service
Caldwell, NJ., U.S.A.
(973) 226-3476
This is a very very helpful video, clarified most of the issues I haven't been able to understanding for years. Thank you so much.
I believe the crossed polarity as you've described is "dual polarity". Circular polarity is when the horizontal and vertical signals are out of phase and create a rotation in the polarity. A spin stabilized satellite most clearly demonstrates how circular polarization works. This WIKI has an excellent graphic and explanation: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circular_polarization
An excellent video with many good animations. I imagine you took quite a long time and a lot of effort to add so many animations to your slides.
Simple, but powerfull, very didactic, better than many of our university teachers, best regards from Colombia OnLineEngineer
I have looked all over the place for some explanation about radio polarization. Especially what circular polarization is. Never would've thought i'd find the answer in a youtube video. Very detailed information in your video, thank you very much.
Thank you for this very lively and informative video, I now understand RF a lot better than I did before watching. Good job!
This is very well done. Clear, paced well, good animations. I used it as part of my College for Kids class on amateur radio. Thanks.
Excellent video, narration and animationns! This is EXTEMELY helpful for me to send to my sons who I am getting into Ham / Amateur radio! Thanks so much and keep them comming! :)
wow!I been missing this..this excellent
Where was this in 1992, when I really needed it. Books and more books.
Excellent video. Best one I've seen so far. Many thanks!
Just amazing, thank you!!!
Outstanding Video. Concepts explained in simple way.
Great job! Very clear easy to comprehend.
I´ve been thinking about this video for a while now. Thanks!
Thank you very much for publishing this video. Great Help
wow, thank you. literally everything I wanted to know regarding this subject was answered in this video.
Brilliant! This is the best informational video I have ever watched on you tube! Very easy to understand!!! Radio waves have been difficult for me to grasp but this video helped me under stand soooooo much! Thank you sooooooo much!
Dishes are used for very high frequencies, in the Gigahertz. The parabolic shape of the dish focuses the high frequencies into a very tight beam, this allows almost all the energy to be directed in one direction. When receiving the dish again focuses the received signal and amplifies it. Dishes work with both horizontal, vertical and circular polarized RF.
Excellent, Excellent, Excellent!!!! Well done video
Well done. Thanks for Austin, Texas. May Jesus Christ bless you.
Great work. Clarified why I would like to have a circularly polarized yagi for satelllite work.
Absolutely the best video on this subject!
Great explanation. Much obliged.
Very useful information and done in a very understandable way. Thank you.
Just as an additional note - EM waves may be harmful if the radiation intensity is large enough (so-called "thermal effects"), but the health effects when exposed to EM waves also depends on the characteristics of the waveform which is transmitted. A number of studies have been performed to research the effects of EM waves, particularly with center frequencies used in cellular and Wi-Fi, combined with the actual waveforms to determine whether the exposure has any effect on mammalian health.
Some of these studies have shown that these particular center frequencies and waveforms are coupled to e.g. VGCC activation in cells - but don't take my word for it - go ahead and read the research papers!
On 10 W radios, for example, there is advice on the danger of seeing the waveguide directly or standing in front of it. Yes, radios are hazardous.
Very clear and good video; thank you!
Outstanding vedio & interesting &l like it
Excellent production! 73 de AC6GM!
Great video. Thanks for doing it.
its so organized and useful, thanks so much for making this
Great explanation. Thank you!
Excellent.
Great introductory video 👍👍
Awesome, very informative. I have got many answers to the questions that i used to think when i was a kid haha. Thanks for sharing and making this wonderful and informative visualization about Radio Waves.
Well done...very informative. Thank you.
Awesome video! Thanks heaps for putting the time in to make it. You've helped me understand the way radio waves behave a lot better. :-)
Well described and good video
amazing presentation. very well presented.
Excellent presentation.
fabulous video! Appreciations:)
Very nicely and detailed demonstrated.
Very useful comprehensive video, Thanks.
Understood it easily with the great explanation
Great presentation!!
Excellent! Thank you!
Very well explained! A really great video, with very useful information. Congrats!
What an awesome video! Thanks.
Great simple to understand video.
Easy to understand, and information shared at a good speed.
Awesome.. Thanks for making this video.
Best tutorial!
Thank you very much!
Very well presented. Thank you!
excellent animation with explanation ! thank you sir. !
well explained sir. now i am doing a project on designing an antenna. your video helped me alot.
Nicely done.
Thank you. Good work.
awesome video.!. thank u so much for uploading :)
Thanks for your hard work
Best vedio on UA-cam
Brilliant. Thanks a ton.
Wow! Loved the video!
very good description.
great video, valuable informations thank you (y)
best ever......... thanx a lot sir,
Thanks, this really helped on some school work I was doing recently! :)
perfect lesson. Thank you
Amazing job
very informative long lasting information
Thank you Mr OLE
Very useful video! Thank you!