Driven element (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

In a multielement antenna array (such as a Yagi–Uda antenna), the driven element or active element is the element in the antenna (typically a metal rod) which is electrically connected to the receiver or transmitter. In a transmitting antenna it is driven or excited by the radio frequency current from the transmitter, and is the source of the radio waves. In a receiving antenna it collects the incoming radio waves for reception, and converts them to tiny oscillating electric currents, which are applied to the receiver. Multielement antennas like the Yagi typically consist of a driven element, connected to the receiver or transmitter through a feed line, and a number of other elements which are not driven, called parasitic elements. The driven element is often a dipole. The parasitic elemen

thumbnail

Property Value
dbo:abstract In a multielement antenna array (such as a Yagi–Uda antenna), the driven element or active element is the element in the antenna (typically a metal rod) which is electrically connected to the receiver or transmitter. In a transmitting antenna it is driven or excited by the radio frequency current from the transmitter, and is the source of the radio waves. In a receiving antenna it collects the incoming radio waves for reception, and converts them to tiny oscillating electric currents, which are applied to the receiver. Multielement antennas like the Yagi typically consist of a driven element, connected to the receiver or transmitter through a feed line, and a number of other elements which are not driven, called parasitic elements. The driven element is often a dipole. The parasitic elements act as resonators and couple electromagnetically with the driven element, and serve to modify the radiation pattern of the antenna, directing the radio waves in one direction, increasing the gain of the antenna. An antenna may have more than one driven element, although the most common multielement antenna, the Yagi, usually has only one. For example, transmitting antennas for AM radio stations often consist of several mast radiators, each of which functions as a half-wave monopole driven element, to create a particular radiation pattern. A two-element array with the elements spaced a quarter wavelength apart has a distinct cardioid radiation pattern when the second element is driven with a source -90° out of phase relative to the first element. A log-periodic antenna (LPDA) consists of many dipole elements of decreasing length, all of which are driven. However, because they are different lengths, only one of the many dipoles is resonant at a given frequency, so only one is driven at a time. The dipole that is driven depends on the frequency of the signal. Phased arrays may have hundreds of driven elements. Household multiband television antennas generally consist of a hybrid between a UHF Yagi with one driven dipole and a log-periodic for VHF behind that with alternating active elements. The driven elements between the UHF and VHF are then coupled and often matched for a 75 ohm coaxial downlead to the receiver. When a "driven element" is referred to in an antenna array, it is often assumed that other elements are not driven (i.e. parasitic, passive) and that the array is tightly coupled (spacing far below a wavelength). (en)
dbo:thumbnail wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Yagi-principe.png?width=300
dbo:wikiPageID 1754951 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 3211 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1106377912 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Electric_current dbr:Monopole_antenna dbr:Passive_radiator dbr:Antenna_array dbr:Signalling_(telecommunications) dbr:Mast_radiator dbr:Frequency dbr:Antenna_gain dbr:Feed_line dbr:Phase_(waves) dbr:Log-periodic_antenna dbr:Cardioid dbr:Radio_frequency dbr:Radio_receiver dbr:Resonator dbr:Television_antenna dbc:Antennas_(radio) dbr:Yagi–Uda_antenna dbr:Dipole_antenna dbr:Radio_station dbr:Wavelength dbr:Radiation_pattern dbr:Transmitter dbr:Multiband dbr:Phased_array dbr:Half-wave_radiator dbr:Parasitic_element dbr:Matching_transformer dbr:File:Yagi-principe.png
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Redirect dbt:Unreferenced
dct:subject dbc:Antennas_(radio)
gold:hypernym dbr:Element
rdf:type dbo:MilitaryUnit
rdfs:comment In a multielement antenna array (such as a Yagi–Uda antenna), the driven element or active element is the element in the antenna (typically a metal rod) which is electrically connected to the receiver or transmitter. In a transmitting antenna it is driven or excited by the radio frequency current from the transmitter, and is the source of the radio waves. In a receiving antenna it collects the incoming radio waves for reception, and converts them to tiny oscillating electric currents, which are applied to the receiver. Multielement antennas like the Yagi typically consist of a driven element, connected to the receiver or transmitter through a feed line, and a number of other elements which are not driven, called parasitic elements. The driven element is often a dipole. The parasitic elemen (en)
rdfs:label Driven element (en)
owl:sameAs freebase:Driven element wikidata:Driven element https://global.dbpedia.org/id/4ihg6
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Driven_element?oldid=1106377912&ns=0
foaf:depiction wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Yagi-principe.png
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Driven_element
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of dbr:Active_element dbr:Active_radiator
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:Passive_radiator dbr:Antenna_array dbr:Antenna_feed dbr:Antenna_types dbr:Curtain_array dbr:Corner_reflector_antenna dbr:Antenna_(radio) dbr:Log-periodic_antenna dbr:Folded_unipole_antenna dbr:Yagi–Uda_antenna dbr:Dipole_antenna dbr:Butler_matrix dbr:Radiation_resistance dbr:Rubber_ducky_antenna dbr:Short_backfire_antenna dbr:Slot_antenna dbr:Reflective_array_antenna dbr:Plasma_antenna dbr:Active_element dbr:Active_radiator
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Driven_element