Lecture Note 3x-Radio Frequency Fundamentals
Lecture Note 3x-Radio Frequency Fundamentals
Lecture Note 3x-Radio Frequency Fundamentals
● Wavelength formulas
– Wavelength (inches) = 11.811/frequency (GHz)
– Wavelength (centimeters) = 30/frequency (GHz)
● Example :
– 2.4 GHz
● 11.8.11/2.4 = 4.9 inches
● 30/2.4 = 12.5 centimeters
Frequency
● Frequency is the number of times a specified event occurs
within a specified time interval.
● A standard measurement of frequency is hertz (Hz), which
was named after the German physicist Heinrich Rudolf
Hertz.
● An event that occurs once in 1 second has a frequency of 1
Hz. An event that occurs 325 times in 1 second is measured
as 325 Hz.
– 1 hertz (Hz) = 1 cycle per sec
– 1 kilohertz (KHz) = 1,000 cycles per sec
– 1 megahertz (MHz) = one million cycles per sec
– 1 gigahertz (GHz) = one billion cycles per sec
So when we are talking about 2.4 GHz WLAN radios, the RF signal is oscillating 2.4
billion times per second!
Amplitude
● Amplitude can be defined as the maximum displacement of
a continuous wave.
● It can be characterized simply as the signal’s strength, or
power. (how loud or strong the signal is)
● With RF signals, the amplitude corresponds to the electrical
field of the wave.
● When discussing signal strength in a WLAN, amplitude is
usually referred to as either transmit amplitude or received
amplitude. Transmit amplitude is typically defined as the
amount of initial amplitude that leaves the radio transmitter.
The first signal’s crests and troughs
have more magnitude; thus the signal
has more amplitude.
Sitting directly behind the obstruction is an area known as the RF shadow . Depending
on the change in direction of the diffracted signals, the area of the RF shadow can
become a dead zone of coverage or still possibly receive degraded signals.
Loss (Attenuation)