radio antenna - meaning and definition. What is radio antenna
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What (who) is radio antenna - definition

ELECTRICAL DEVICE WHICH CONVERTS ELECTRIC POWER INTO RADIO WAVES, AND VICE VERSA
Antenna theory; Radio antenna; Antennas; Antenna (electronics); Antenna (astronomy); Antena (radio); Antenna (electromagnetism); Radio antennas; External removable antenna; External antenna; TV Aerial; Radio antennae; Radio Antenna; Aerial Wire; Polarization (antenna); Aerial (radio); Polarization (antennas); Antenna bandwidth; GP antenna; Antenna polarization; Antennas (radio)
  • base station]] antennas
  • The wave reflected by earth can be considered as emitted by the image antenna.
  •  The currents in an antenna appear as an image in ''opposite'' phase when reflected at grazing angles. This causes a phase reversal for waves emitted by a horizontally polarized antenna (center) but not for a vertically polarized antenna (left).
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  • UHF]] frequencies.
  • Film on working of antenna
  • Electronic symbol for an antenna
  • Typical center-loaded mobile CB antenna with [[loading coil]]
  • An automobile's [[whip antenna]], a common example of an omnidirectional antenna.
  • I}}</span>) whose width is proportional to the amplitude of the quantity at that point on the antenna.
  • Diagram of the [[electric field]]s (''<span style="color:blue;">'''blue'''</span>'') and [[magnetic field]]s (''<span style="color:red;">'''red'''</span>'') radiated by a [[dipole antenna]] ('' '''black''' rods'') during transmission.
  • Half-wave [[dipole antenna]]
  • Polar plots of the horizontal cross sections of a (virtual) Yagi-Uda-antenna. Outline connects points with 3&nbsp;dB field power compared to an ISO emitter.
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Military radio antenna kites         
  • Tetrahedral kite built by Alexander Graham Bell being used to lift a radio antenna, 1906.
  • King Kite, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas c. 1905
  • Kites built to raise signal flags and radio antennae, First Company, Signal Corps, National Guard of New York, 1907.
  • frameless
  • frameless
User:Bcarusella/Signal Corps Kites (United States Army); User:Bcarusella/Signal Corps Antenna Kites (United States Army); United States military radio antenna kites
Radio antenna kites are used to carry a radio antenna aloft, higher than is practical with a mast. They are most often associated with portable radio systems, usually with pre-World War I field equipment, and were also occasionally used to increase radio range on Naval ships.
antennule         
  • Cutaway diagram of a barnacle, with antennae highlighted by arrow
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  • Terms used to describe shapes of insect antennae
  • Olfactory receptors (scales and holes) on the antenna of the butterfly ''[[Aglais io]]'', electron micrograph
  • Electron micrograph]] of antenna surface detail of a wasp ''([[Vespula vulgaris]])''
APPENDAGES USED FOR SENSING IN ARTHROPODS
Antennule; Antennomere; Flagellomere; Antenna (Biology); Antennomeres; Antennal; Antennary; Antennation; Antenna (arthropod anatomy); Flagellomeres; Antennae (biology); Geniculate antenna; Pedicel (antenna); Antenna of insects; Antennules; Insect antenna; Antenna (anatomy); Antenna (insect); Arthropod antennae
[an't?nju:l]
¦ noun Zoology a small antenna, especially either of the first pair of antennae in a crustacean.
Antennal         
  • Cutaway diagram of a barnacle, with antennae highlighted by arrow
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  • Terms used to describe shapes of insect antennae
  • Olfactory receptors (scales and holes) on the antenna of the butterfly ''[[Aglais io]]'', electron micrograph
  • Electron micrograph]] of antenna surface detail of a wasp ''([[Vespula vulgaris]])''
APPENDAGES USED FOR SENSING IN ARTHROPODS
Antennule; Antennomere; Flagellomere; Antenna (Biology); Antennomeres; Antennal; Antennary; Antennation; Antenna (arthropod anatomy); Flagellomeres; Antennae (biology); Geniculate antenna; Pedicel (antenna); Antenna of insects; Antennules; Insect antenna; Antenna (anatomy); Antenna (insect); Arthropod antennae
·adj Belonging to the antennae.

Wikipedia

Antenna (radio)

In radio engineering, an antenna or aerial is the interface between radio waves propagating through space and electric currents moving in metal conductors, used with a transmitter or receiver. In transmission, a radio transmitter supplies an electric current to the antenna's terminals, and the antenna radiates the energy from the current as electromagnetic waves (radio waves). In reception, an antenna intercepts some of the power of a radio wave in order to produce an electric current at its terminals, that is applied to a receiver to be amplified. Antennas are essential components of all radio equipment.

An antenna is an array of conductors (elements), electrically connected to the receiver or transmitter. Antennas can be designed to transmit and receive radio waves in all horizontal directions equally (omnidirectional antennas), or preferentially in a particular direction (directional, or high-gain, or “beam” antennas). An antenna may include components not connected to the transmitter, parabolic reflectors, horns, or parasitic elements, which serve to direct the radio waves into a beam or other desired radiation pattern. Strong directivity and good efficiency when transmitting are hard to achieve with antennas with dimensions that are much smaller than a half wavelength.

The first antennas were built in 1888 by German physicist Heinrich Hertz in his pioneering experiments to prove the existence of waves predicted by the electromagnetic theory of James Clerk Maxwell. Hertz placed dipole antennas at the focal point of parabolic reflectors for both transmitting and receiving. Starting in 1895, Guglielmo Marconi began development of antennas practical for long-distance, wireless telegraphy, for which he received a Nobel Prize.


Examples of use of radio antenna
1. On Friday, a radio antenna poked out the top of the backpack.
2. With different computer chips and a cleverly modified ham radio antenna, Shortstop made an admirable jammer.
3. If there‘s cosmic company in our galaxy, a radio antenna might just be the way to find it.
4. Police recovered a radio antenna at the scene, which they believe came from the car that killed Sennimalai.
5. There goes my antenna," Hescock said, as a branch pulled a magnetically mounted radio antenna off the hood of his SUV.