Antenna factor
In electromagnetics, the antenna factor is defined as the ratio of the electric field E to the voltage V induced across the terminals of an antenna:
If all quantities are expressed logarithmically in decibels instead of SI units, the above equation becomes
The voltage measured at the output terminals of an antenna is not the actual field intensity due to actual antenna gain, aperture characteristics, and loading effects.
For a magnetic field, with units of A/m, the corresponding antenna factor is in units of A/. For the relationship between the electric and magnetic fields, see the impedance of [free space].
For a 50 Ω load, knowing that PD Ae = Pr = V2/R and E2= PD ~ 377PD, the antenna factor is developed as:
Where
- Ae = /4π : the antenna effective aperture
- PD is the power density in watts per unit area
- Pr is the power delivered into the load resistance presented by the receiver
- G: the antenna gain
- is the magnetic constant
- is the electric constant