tfcwings said:
What about a segmented or top-loaded antenna? For segmented antennas, a few examples would be those from WHO, KSTP and KFBK.
Other things about equal, a segmented ("Franklin") antenna can produce a higher groundwave field than a simple monopole. But it needs more height than a monopole, and a complex feed system in order to do that.
For example, the overall height of the WHO sectionalized antenna is 277 meters, and its 1 km IDF is 3343 mV/m. KNX using a frequency 30 kHz higher than WHO and a 150-meter, non-sectionalized monopole has a 1 km IDF of 2828 mV/m.
The distance to the 5 mV/m groundwave contour over 8 mS/m earth is 50 miles for WHO and 43.8 miles for KNX.
As for top-loaded antennas the only one I can think of was KFI, but that was built that way because they were unable to put a standard half-wave antenna in due to flight path problems, IIRC.
Top loading is useful (within limits) to modify the current distribution along a tower or tower section, which can improve the groundwave field compared to not using top loading on that same structure. Essentially it makes the groundwave performance of the radiator about the same as that of a taller structure (other things equal).
Also what about combining the two - segmented (like a Franklin) AND top-loaded (with a capacitance top hat) - what happens then?
A segmented radiator can use loading in either or both sections, and will contribute to the final performance of the system.
Or what about triple-segmented or more, or however it is that FM and TV stations narrow their beam width?
FM and TV broadcast antennas typically use arrays of discrete, identical radiators at spacings of 0.5 to 1 wavelength apart in the vertical plane, each fed with equal power and phase. This arrangement results in maximizing the net far-field from all the radiators in the horizontal plane, and reducing it at higher and lower elevation angles.
If an AM antenna was built on the same principle as a typical multi-element FM broadcast antenna, what might the efficiency be, in mV/m @ 1 km for 1 kW of power?
This is physically and economically impractical for the frequencies used in AM broadcasting. But an h-plane field gain of 6 X and greater is practical for UHF transmit antennas, compared to the peak field of a 1/2-wave dipole.