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Encyclopedia > Closed waveguide

In physics, optics, and telecommunication, a waveguide is a structure that confines and guides a propagating electromagnetic wave.


In the microwave region of the electromagnetic spectrum, a waveguide normally consists of a hollow metallic conductor, usually rectangular, elliptical, or circular in cross section. This type of waveguide may, under certain conditions, contain a solid or gaseous dielectric material.


In the optical region, a waveguide used as a long transmission line consists of a solid dielectric filament (optical fiber), usually circular in cross section. In integrated optical circuits an optical waveguide may consist of a thin dielectric film.


In the radio frequency region, ionized layers of the stratosphere and refractive surfaces of the troposphere may also act as an atmospheric waveguide.


In digital computing, the term waveguide can also be used for data buffers used as delay lines that simulate physical waveguide behavior, such as in digital waveguide synthesis.

Image:TE10.gifImage:TE11.gif

Waveguide propagation modes depend on the operating wavelength and polarization and the shape and size of the guide. In hollow metallic waveguides, the fundamental modes are the transverse electric TE1,0 mode for rectangular and TE1,1 for circular waveguides, seen here in cross-section:


A dielectric waveguide is a waveguide that consists of a dielectric material surrounded by another dielectric material, such as air, glass, or plastic, with a lower refractive index. An example of a dielectric waveguide is an optical fiber. Paradoxically, a metallic waveguide filled with a dielectric material is not a dielectric waveguide.


A closed waveguide is an electromagnetic waveguide (a) that is tubular, usually with a circular or rectangular cross section, (b) that has electrically conducting walls, (c) that may be hollow or filled with a dielectric material, (d) that can support a large number of discrete propagating modes, though only a few may be practical, (e) in which each discrete mode defines the propagation constant for that mode, (f) in which the field at any point is describable in terms of the supported modes, (g) in which there is no radiation field, and (h) in which discontinuities and bends cause mode conversion but not radiation.


A slotted waveguide is generally used for radar and other similar applications.


Sources: in part from Federal Standard 1037C and from MIL-STD-188, and ATIS




See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Waveguide - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (492 words)
Waveguides are used in physics and microwave telecomunications to propagate electromagnetic waves or radio frequencies in hollow metallic tubes.
The first waveguide was proposed by J. Thomson in 1893 and experimentally verified by O. Lodge in 1894; the mathematical analysis of the propagating modes within a hollow metal cylinder was first performed by Lord Rayleigh in 1897.
A dielectric waveguide is a waveguide that consists of a dielectric material surrounded by another dielectric material, such as air, glass, or plastic, with a lower refractive index.
United States Patent Application: 0020020691 (4501 words)
The apparatus of claim 12 further comprising a housing connected with the waveguide, the housing having a hole for receiving exit gas from the waveguide, the housing having a port for exhausting the gas.
One purpose of conduit 59 is to prevent unnecessary exposure of the interior of waveguide 40 to the gas flowing in waveguide 40.
[0036] The dimensions of waveguide 40 in FIG.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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