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All,
If you were given a phased array of 30 elements, which provided a formed beam of 3.1dB/K, and you were required to determine the dB/K of a single element from that 30, how would you do it? Would it be 3.1-10*LOG10(30)? Also, would the net combiner gain, including beamforming losses, plus the single element dB/K be equal to the 3.1dB/K? Thanks in advance. Bobby. |
#2
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On 10 May 2006 14:07:59 -0700, "Bobby"
wrote: All, If you were given a phased array of 30 elements, which provided a formed beam of 3.1dB/K, and you were required to determine the dB/K of a single element from that 30, how would you do it? Would it be 3.1-10*LOG10(30)? Also, would the net combiner gain, including beamforming losses, plus the single element dB/K be equal to the 3.1dB/K? Thanks in advance. Bobby. Hi Bobby, Gain is not proportioned across elements even though there is a correlation between their count and the total gain. dB/K is for noise temperature, not element count. Your equation 3.1-10*LOG10(30)? suggests a temperature of 30º absolute, not 30 elements. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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