Thank You! I took physics 45+ years back - the concepts have been utilized often since then, but NOT the math. Your explanations are very clear, and greatly appreciated. So much to learn!
You've done an excellent job at condensing a very large amount of material into under half an hour. I can't wait to continue further into this series. Thanks and 73's!
Another series that fits exactly what I need! Just finished my first AM/NFM/SSB SDR based on your radio design 101 series now it is time to kickstart my antenna project.
This is a great video and I appreciate you breaking it down so well. I'd like to make a small suggestion and please, please, please don't take it the wrong way. I promise I'm not trying to be nit picky. I'm a sound guy so these are the terms I think in. In future videos, you might consider addressing some of the mouth noises issues. There's a lot of mouth and lip smacking between sentences. That can usually be addressed by rinsing the mouth and then having some hot tea before recording. :) Just a thought. Thanks again!
Thanks. I noticed that too, but only recently. Hopefully you and I are more sensitive than most 🙂 I did notice that if I turned the volume lower, it was OK. Will try the solution(s) you mentioned before making new videos going forward (July 2024). Maybe UA-cam can create an AI filter to get rid of these artifacts in the existing ones ? ;-)
hello professooor!!! was stumbling a bit through my capstone project concerning a switching rf circuit. thats because I think the fundamentals of RF and antenna did not really click. I found your youtube channel then your website and man!! i always wanted a great source that helps package the material of rf for me. and just taking a look at your website. I have hw to do! thanks a lot for the help 🙏🏽 i am excited to get started
This was SO helpful. For a young person interested in this field and thinking about college, what is the optimal route into the wireless communications field? Is it better to do a general four-year bachelor degree in physics or electrical engineering or should one just dive in and try to enroll in a telecoms or RF engineering specialty program?
Glad it is helpful ! For one interested in the wireless field, I would recommend electrical engineering (but please get multiple opinions/viewpoints). My reasoning is that EE opens up a very wide field of applications whereas physics tends to focus mainly on the theoretical underpinnings that support engineering. I have also known some people who got physics degrees but found employment more difficult. I'm not against physics - I love it - but the communications field involves a vast set of topics and technologies that are really part of engineering. The second part of the question is harder. I think it may depend more on the schools you would consider and what they offer. In the US, comm is still part of EE. But, some schools do offer "focus areas" to target something like comm more early on in the program than they did when I went through the programs. Hope that helps. Again, get other opinions for sure, and look at different schools you might consider to see how their programs are set up. Enjoy the journey !
Thanks. Sorry, I don't have any experience with measuring near-fields, but episode 5 does talk a little about how to estimate E-field strength analytically in a free-space environment. I tried to be careful there to emphasize that it's only far-field however. In episode 6, the plan is to briefly cover some equations for near-fields and how that's done in general in simulators, but probably not measurements unfortunately. Near fields are pretty complex and exposure studies are outside my area.
Thanks. I will look into the near-field solution more and see if there's a way to improve the graphic there in the future. It's definitely a jumble in that area in reality. Do you think it's an OK approximation as shown close to the feedpoint where V and I sources are in-phase?
thx for this explanation but i got a question, does antenna matter when we wanna send and recv to from diff freqs from single antenna (with sdr) or should we use a good sdr.
It's tricky to try to answer this since I'm not sure what frequency ranges are involved and if you wish to send/receive simultaneously (search for "full duplex" info), or one at a time (half-duplex). For a narrow range of frequency (e.g. within about 5% of the center frequency), most antennas will suffice with strong signals coming in. But I'm personally not a big fan of SDRs. The ones I've tried had a lot of 'spurious' reception when signals are weak and there are other signals nearby in frequency that are strong. So I would definitely recommend getting the best one you can - or a more traditional wide-band receiver. See this video for more on this. I've keyed it up to a good HF (up to 30 MHz) radio and how it compares with others: ua-cam.com/video/XW3TYQstiuk/v-deo.html Hope that helps.
The ads are placed in UA-cam videos by UA-cam, and we have no control over them (unless perhaps a channel is monetized, which this one is not). That said, I don't think there's a plausible mechanism for infection if you don't click on something to follow a link somewhere. AFAIK, ads are just other streamed video - not software. Hope that helps.
Thank You! I took physics 45+ years back - the concepts have been utilized often since then, but NOT the math. Your explanations are very clear, and greatly appreciated. So much to learn!
Glad it helped!
You've done an excellent job at condensing a very large amount of material into under half an hour. I can't wait to continue further into this series. Thanks and 73's!
Thank you ! Hope the rest are useful too. 73
Thank you for the wonderful video. Finally someone who explains those things simply, with many photos. Looking forward to the next one.
Awesome, thank you!
Watching your videos has brought me so much closer to understanding the mysteries of radio magic. Thank you for your monumental effort!
You are very welcome. Glad to hear it's appreciated.
What a cool video series! Thank you so much!
You're definitely welcome. Thanks for letting me know it was helpful!
Another series that fits exactly what I need! Just finished my first AM/NFM/SSB SDR based on your radio design 101 series now it is time to kickstart my antenna project.
Neat !
Such a great amount of information on antennas in a short time. Thanks
You're very welcome. Thanks for the feedback. That is the goal - packing in the key stuff without getting too deep :-)
Gooood! I think I'll watch the serlies again and again.
Thanks you for crystallising the true natural aspect of light. a very good and sharp explanation.
Glad it was helpful. Thanks for the comment.
What a beautiful class, Professor!👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾 Congratulations, God bless you and Marry Christmans! Jacareí-Sao Paulo-Brazil.
Thank you. Merry Christmas and happy holidays from the US !
This is just what i like , thanks
This is a great video and I appreciate you breaking it down so well. I'd like to make a small suggestion and please, please, please don't take it the wrong way. I promise I'm not trying to be nit picky. I'm a sound guy so these are the terms I think in. In future videos, you might consider addressing some of the mouth noises issues. There's a lot of mouth and lip smacking between sentences. That can usually be addressed by rinsing the mouth and then having some hot tea before recording. :) Just a thought. Thanks again!
Thanks. I noticed that too, but only recently. Hopefully you and I are more sensitive than most 🙂 I did notice that if I turned the volume lower, it was OK. Will try the solution(s) you mentioned before making new videos going forward (July 2024). Maybe UA-cam can create an AI filter to get rid of these artifacts in the existing ones ? ;-)
hello professooor!!! was stumbling a bit through my capstone project concerning a switching rf circuit. thats because I think the fundamentals of RF and antenna did not really click. I found your youtube channel then your website and man!! i always wanted a great source that helps package the material of rf for me. and just taking a look at your website. I have hw to do! thanks a lot for the help 🙏🏽 i am excited to get started
Excellent. I'm really glad it helps - and that you found the Website too. Thanks for letting me know !
Very good
Thanks!
This was SO helpful. For a young person interested in this field and thinking about college, what is the optimal route into the wireless communications field? Is it better to do a general four-year bachelor degree in physics or electrical engineering or should one just dive in and try to enroll in a telecoms or RF engineering specialty program?
Glad it is helpful ! For one interested in the wireless field, I would recommend electrical engineering (but please get multiple opinions/viewpoints). My reasoning is that EE opens up a very wide field of applications whereas physics tends to focus mainly on the theoretical underpinnings that support engineering. I have also known some people who got physics degrees but found employment more difficult. I'm not against physics - I love it - but the communications field involves a vast set of topics and technologies that are really part of engineering. The second part of the question is harder. I think it may depend more on the schools you would consider and what they offer. In the US, comm is still part of EE. But, some schools do offer "focus areas" to target something like comm more early on in the program than they did when I went through the programs. Hope that helps. Again, get other opinions for sure, and look at different schools you might consider to see how their programs are set up. Enjoy the journey !
Thanx a lot, my next course (il France) wil, I hope, have the same level of science a good sense.
This is great. One hope that I have is to understand about actually measuring rf exposure inside of the near field rf from the transmitting antenna.
Thanks. Sorry, I don't have any experience with measuring near-fields, but episode 5 does talk a little about how to estimate E-field strength analytically in a free-space environment. I tried to be careful there to emphasize that it's only far-field however. In episode 6, the plan is to briefly cover some equations for near-fields and how that's done in general in simulators, but probably not measurements unfortunately. Near fields are pretty complex and exposure studies are outside my area.
@@MegawattKS I know. But, I think that your videos will help me with understanding about E fields and H fields. Thanks again for a great video.
Curved wavefronts typically do not have E and B in phase, but plane waves must have.
Thanks. I will look into the near-field solution more and see if there's a way to improve the graphic there in the future. It's definitely a jumble in that area in reality. Do you think it's an OK approximation as shown close to the feedpoint where V and I sources are in-phase?
thx for this explanation but i got a question, does antenna matter when we wanna send and recv to from diff freqs from single antenna (with sdr) or should we use a good sdr.
It's tricky to try to answer this since I'm not sure what frequency ranges are involved and if you wish to send/receive simultaneously (search for "full duplex" info), or one at a time (half-duplex). For a narrow range of frequency (e.g. within about 5% of the center frequency), most antennas will suffice with strong signals coming in. But I'm personally not a big fan of SDRs. The ones I've tried had a lot of 'spurious' reception when signals are weak and there are other signals nearby in frequency that are strong. So I would definitely recommend getting the best one you can - or a more traditional wide-band receiver. See this video for more on this. I've keyed it up to a good HF (up to 30 MHz) radio and how it compares with others: ua-cam.com/video/XW3TYQstiuk/v-deo.html Hope that helps.
Thanks, great video!!
Thanks !
🙏💐💐✔️
STOP the Ads, as most ads have Malware and are killing computers!!!
The ads are placed in UA-cam videos by UA-cam, and we have no control over them (unless perhaps a channel is monetized, which this one is not). That said, I don't think there's a plausible mechanism for infection if you don't click on something to follow a link somewhere. AFAIK, ads are just other streamed video - not software. Hope that helps.
Terrible. Brings back PTSD from my college days of enduring poor instructors. Unsubscribing.
That's fantastic, you won't be missed.