Electromagnetic Scintillation
Electromagnetic Scintillation describes the phase and amplitude fluctuations imposed on signals that travel through the atmosphere. These volumes provide a modern reference and comprehensive tutorial for this subject, treating both optical and microwave propagation. Measurements and predictions are integrated at each step of the development. The first volume dealt with phase and angle-of-arrival measurement errors, which are accurately described by geometrical optics. This second volume concentrates on amplitude and intensity fluctuations of the received signal.
- Provides a modern, comprehensive reference for all aspects of electromagnetic scintillation
- Tailored to the needs of practitioners: astronomers, applied physicists and engineers
- This tutorial presentation integrates predictions and measurements
Reviews & endorsements
'The author is to be congratulated, and thanked, for writing this comprehensive treatment of the scintillation of electromagnetic waves over a broad spectrum … Everyone specializing in electromagnetic scattering should have these volumes on his-her desk or in a nearby library.' IEEE Antennas and Propagation Magazine
Product details
No date availableAdobe eBook Reader
9780511057083
0 pages
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116 b/w illus. 12 tables
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The Rytov approximation
- 3. Amplitude variance
- 4. Spatial covariance
- 5. Power spectrum and autocorrelation
- 6. Frequency correlation
- 7. Phase fluctuations
- 8. Double scattering
- 9. Field strength moments
- 10. Amplitude distributions
- 11. Changes in polarization
- 12. The validity of the Rytov approximation
- Appendices
- Indexes.