Whip Antenna

A whip antenna is an antenna with a single driven element and a ground plane. These antennas are very common, especially for mobile applications and hand held radios. These antennas are usually attached to a vehicle and designed to be flexible, so that they don't break when struck. These antennas derive their name from the whip-like motion they exibit during transit. A whip antenna is a stiff, yet flexible, wire (almost always) mounted vertically, and attached at one end to a ground plane. The whip antenna can also be called a half-dipole antenna, and as such, has a toroidal radiation pattern where the axis of the toroid centers about the whip. The length of the whip determines its wavelength, although it may be shortened with a loading coil anywhere along the antenna. Whips are generally a fraction of their actual operating wavelength, half-wave, and quarter-wave whips are very common. Being vertically mounted causes the whip antenna to have vertical polarization. Whips are thought of as omni-directional, because they radiate equally in all directions when viewed from above, however whips are less receptive to signals directly above them.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
list of topics related to current polish territories
helical antenna
francisco de bobadilla
second army
nose flute
helen alice kinnear
third army
longnor
adelaide hoodless
d'alembert's paradox
zongzi
hamish henderson
chloroflexi
accretionary lapilli
dipole antenna
lord torpichen
retinopathy of prematurity
lord fairfax of cameron
chris mckinstry
lord polwarth
jehoash of judah
lapilli
london mayoral election, 2004
daugherty report
assessment
earl of portarlington
lord reay
infancy gospels
guy montag
jehoash of israel
lord rollo
francis skinner
ken ogata
earl of rosse
roth
unterseeboot 4
demetrius perricos
earl of ranfurly
atlantic white sided dolphin
uss atule (ss 403)
bap pacocha (ss 48)
marija petkovic
mount mazama
herbert grnemeyer