Dipole antenna far-field pattern

83 views (last 30 days)
Vinci
Vinci on 22 May 2017
Answered: Omkar Savkur on 29 Jun 2021
I need to plot the radiation pattern for a dipole antenna of length L=lambda/2. The example plot given was of L=1.4*lambda.
Example plot of L=1.4*lambda:
My code to try and reproduce the plot for L=1.4*lambda:
%Wavelength
lam = 1;
%Dipole antanna
L = 1.4*lam;
%Phase constant
B = 2*pi/lam;
t = 0:0.01:2*pi;
% Far-field pattern equation
E = abs((cos(B*L/2*cos(t))-cos(B*L/2))./sin(t));
figure()
polar(t,E)
Plot from this code:
I can't figure out where I'm going wrong with this one...
  1 Comment
neil whitesell
neil whitesell on 1 Dec 2020
is ther i version of this with a current input???

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

David Goodmanson
David Goodmanson on 22 May 2017
Hi Vinci, power is proportional to the square of the electric field, so if you use
E2 = abs((cos(B*L/2*cos(t))-cos(B*L/2))./sin(t)).^2;
figure()
polar(t,E2)
the correct figure should pop up.

More Answers (1)

Omkar Savkur
Omkar Savkur on 29 Jun 2021
Hi Vinci, building off David's answer, you can use the polarpattern function to help plot the radiation power. You can interact with the plot and specify the plot parameters all in one line.
% Wavelength
lam = 1;
% Dipole antanna
L = 1.4*lam;
% Phase constant
B = 2*pi/lam;
% Angle in degrees
t = 0:0.1:360;
% Far-field pattern equation
E = abs((cos(B*L/2*cosd(t))-cos(B*L/2))./sind(t)).^2;
figure(1)
polarpattern(t,E,'AngleResolution',30)
You can also use other Antenna Toolbox functions, like pattern, which plots far-field radiation patterns. EHfields can be used to plot electric and magnetic fields at any observation locations, both near and far-field components.

Categories

Find more on Analysis, Benchmarking, and Verification in Help Center and File Exchange

Tags

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!