2.4 ghz point detection

Braeden Hamson

Feb 18, 2016
240
Joined
Feb 18, 2016
Messages
240
I know little about antennas, this is my first foray into RF. I'm trying to find a good antenna that works with 2.4 ghz (wifi, bluetooth and such) I'd like it to have a very very narrow "field of view." Basically I want to be able to take point measurements of 2.5 ghz intensity. I don't know if a 1 degree or less "FOV" is possible or not but that's what I'm hoping for. I don't need to receive any data on this antenna, I just want to know the intensity at that point. I also want minimal. interference from the area outside of its "FOV." I've looked at Yagi-Uda antennas and they seem valuable to me but I'm not sure.
 

davenn

Moderator
Sep 5, 2009
14,470
Joined
Sep 5, 2009
Messages
14,470
I know little about antennas, this is my first foray into RF. I'm trying to find a good antenna that works with 2.4 ghz (wifi, bluetooth and such) I'd like it to have a very very narrow "field of view." Basically I want to be able to take point measurements of 2.5 ghz intensity. I don't know if a 1 degree or less "FOV" is possible or not but that's what I'm hoping for.

1 deg, no, 15 - 20 deg would be the minimum. 20 - 40 deg would be the norm
 

Braeden Hamson

Feb 18, 2016
240
Joined
Feb 18, 2016
Messages
240
Why is 15-20 deg the minimum? Also, I don't know much about antennas, but I have a decent understanding of light and optics. wifi and other 2.4 ghz signals are just photons. Let's consider visible light for right now. If I have a long tube with a photoresistor at the base and an opening at the opposite end. If I coated the inside with a material that totally absorbed light, lets say vantablack then the only light reaching the photoresistor would be light that is directly in front of the tube. Now I understand that visible light has a wavelength of ~400-600 nm and 2.4 ghz signals have a wavelength of 122 mm. That causes some issues. But if I made a ~130 mm diameter tube that didn't reflect signals off its sides so I don't get internal reflections thus narrowing the "FOV" (What's the proper name?) and have a receiver at the end. I see this not working because I can't get a reflectionless surface, but perhaps I could redirect them? I'm not sure, just spitballing here.
 

davenn

Moderator
Sep 5, 2009
14,470
Joined
Sep 5, 2009
Messages
14,470
Why is 15-20 deg the minimum?


because of the limitations of narrow beamwidth vs frequency
Even at 10 GHz less than 5 deg would be quite difficult
24 Ghz and now a couple of degrees is possible.
and by the time you get to t he frequencies of visible then yes very narrow beamwidths are possible
 
Last edited:

davenn

Moderator
Sep 5, 2009
14,470
Joined
Sep 5, 2009
Messages
14,470
but I have a decent understanding of light and optics. wifi and other 2.4 ghz signals are just photons.

no, not as good as understanding as you think ;) ... it is an electromagnetic wave, just as light is
there is NOT a beam of photons shooting out from the source .... photons are not like little bullets

They are a quantum particle, the energy moderator of an EM wave.
photons don't even really exist till they are detected and then they are gone, absorbed by the detector

. But if I made a ~130 mm diameter tube that didn't reflect signals off its sides so I don't get internal reflections thus narrowing the "FOV" (What's the proper name?) and have a receiver at the end.

not going to happen ( beamwidth)

I see this not working because I can't get a reflectionless surface,

for that reason

but perhaps I could redirect them?

which would require reflecting them
 

Braeden Hamson

Feb 18, 2016
240
Joined
Feb 18, 2016
Messages
240
I've learned that I want an antenna with a very narrow aperture. I'm sure this has been the subject of many years of research and a few careers. You seem to have an understanding of EM waves that I haven't yet been taught. Its always bugged me that in school (Second year EE major here) they say light is a particle. Then they say its a wave. Its a marble, it's like water. I feel like it should be some third thing we don't have an analogy for.
I also wonder, is there such a thing as coherent radio waves? Are radio lasers a thing? :D I'm straying from my original question now. Can radio waves only be received in a cone shape?

My original idea was to mount this antenna on a gimbal mount and sweep it back and forth up and down in a raster scan. This would create data that had X Y position and intensity measured at those points. This could then be interpreted into an image. However, it seems that I would end up running into the same issues that microscopes have. The objects you're trying to see are smaller than the wavelength you're seeing them with. I thought maybe I could get around this issue by using point detection. But I also know that there are objects that block and deflect, and reflect 2.4 ghz signals. So there is something happening.

Lastly I wonder if I could get around the beamwidth problem if I overlapped my measurements. Perhaps I could interpolate data that way?
 

kellys_eye

Jun 25, 2010
6,512
Joined
Jun 25, 2010
Messages
6,512
2.4GHz is 'radar' frequency band stuff therefore slotted waveguides will provide a very narrow beam width. The only other practical way to get such a narrow beam would be to use a microwave dish antenna.
 

davenn

Moderator
Sep 5, 2009
14,470
Joined
Sep 5, 2009
Messages
14,470
2.4GHz is 'radar' frequency band stuff therefore slotted waveguides will provide a very narrow beam width. The only other practical way to get such a narrow beam would be to use a microwave dish antenna.

what RADAR are you thinking of ? .... some weather radar still uses 2.4 area..... definitely not cop radar ....
2.4 is for toy remote control, WiFi, microwave ovens, amateur radio and a dozen other similar uses

still very much wider than what he wants, VERY MUCH :)

Are radio lasers a thing?

The RF equivalent to a laser is a maser -- Microwave Amplification by the Stimulated Emission of Radiation


Dave
 

kellys_eye

Jun 25, 2010
6,512
Joined
Jun 25, 2010
Messages
6,512
S-band and X-band radars are used in the marine field. Beam widths of <1 degree.
 

Braeden Hamson

Feb 18, 2016
240
Joined
Feb 18, 2016
Messages
240
So is it impossible to measure the intensity of EM waves at 2.4 GHz at a point in front of a detector? Will any antenna operating at this frequency at minimum pick up a signal 15-20 deg in front of it? Is this because them EM waves are behaveing like visible light passing through a slit, as per the double slit experiment?
 

kellys_eye

Jun 25, 2010
6,512
Joined
Jun 25, 2010
Messages
6,512
You can measure the EM waves 'anywhere' - your problem is resolution of measurement.

The principles used in yagi antennas will give you a 'directed beam' both for detection of and radiation of RF energy. Have you looked at 'cantennas'? These are where the radiative element (dipole) is placed at the - essentially - focal point of an enclosed, but open-ended, tube. It's a common technique to transmit wi-fi at distance and also used in portable speed detection equipment.

You could also look into strip-line antenna methods.

At the more esoteric end of the scale you could research phase-array antennas.
 

davenn

Moderator
Sep 5, 2009
14,470
Joined
Sep 5, 2009
Messages
14,470
So is it impossible to measure the intensity of EM waves at 2.4 GHz at a point in front of a detector?


no it isn't, I never said that .... it's about the beamwidth of your wanted antenna that is the problem


Will any antenna operating at this frequency at minimum pick up a signal 15-20 deg in front of it?


of course


Is this because them EM waves are behaveing like visible light passing through a slit, as per the double slit experiment?

No, nothing to do with it. Why would you think that ?
 

davenn

Moderator
Sep 5, 2009
14,470
Joined
Sep 5, 2009
Messages
14,470
S-band and X-band radars are used in the marine field. Beam widths of <1 degree.

I have already commented on those frequencies, and without specialist antennas, narrow beamwidth wont be achieved

eg ........
Achieving a beam width less than 1 degree is the "gold standard" by which any weather radar system is measured. Such a beam width speaks to the quality of the antenna and the overall accuracy of the system. A typical S-Band radar system operates in the 2.7 – 3.0 GHz frequency range using an 850kW Klystron transmitter. In order to attain a beam width less than 1 degree, you need a 28-ft (8.53m) antenna. Such a large antenna requires an even larger radome; 40-42-ft (12.2 – 12.8m). All of these large components come with large costs. Additionally, civil works must account for these massive, heavy parts.


Dave
 

kellys_eye

Jun 25, 2010
6,512
Joined
Jun 25, 2010
Messages
6,512
I didn't say such an S-band antenna wouldn't be impractical :p

Experimentally, a small yagi would be the only reasonable solution.
 
Top