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In electromagnetics, directivity is a figure of merit, usually for an antenna. It measures the power density the antenna radiates in the direction of its strongest emission, versus the power density radiated by an ideal isotropic radiator (which emits uniformly in all directions) radiating the same total power. An antenna's directivity is a component of its gain; the other component is its (electrical) efficiency. Directivity is an important measure because most emissions are intended to go in a particular direction or at least in a particular plane (horizontal or vertical); emissions in other directions or planes are wasteful (or worse). The directivity of an actual antenna can vary from 1.76 dBi for a short dipole, to as much as 50 dBi for a large dish antenna.〔 ==Definition== The ''directivity'', ''D'', of an antenna is the maximum value of its ''directive gain''. Directive gain is represented as , and compares the radiation intensity (power per unit solid angle) that an antenna creates in a particular direction against the average value over all directions: : Here and are the standard spherical coordinate angles, is the radiation intensity, which is the power density per unit solid angle, and is the total radiated power. The quantities and satisfy the relation: : that is, the total radiated power is the power per unit solid angle integrated over a spherical surface. Since there are 4π steradians on the surface of a sphere, the quantity represents the ''average'' power per unit solid angle. In other words, directive gain is the radiation intensity of an antenna at a particular coordinate combination divided by what the radiation intensity would have been had the antenna been an isotropic antenna radiating the same amount of total power into space. ''Directivity'', then, is the maximum directive gain value found among all possible solid angles: : The word ''directivity'' is also sometimes used as a synonym for directive gain. This usage is readily understood, as the direction will be specified, or directional dependence implied. Later editions of the IEEE Dictionary〔 specifically endorse this usage; nevertheless it has yet to be universally adopted. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Directivity」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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