System object: phased.IsotropicProjector
Package: phased
Plot isotropic projector directivity and patterns
pattern(projector,FREQ)
pattern(projector,FREQ,AZ)
pattern(projector,FREQ,AZ,EL)
pattern(___,Name,Value)
[PAT,AZ_ANG,EL_ANG] = pattern(___)
pattern(
plots
the 3D directivity pattern (in dBi) for the projector specified in projector
,FREQ
)projector
.
The operating frequency is specified in FREQ
.
pattern(
plots
the projector directivity pattern at the specified azimuth angle.projector
,FREQ
,AZ
)
pattern(
plots
the projector directivity pattern at specified azimuth and elevation
angles.projector
,FREQ
,AZ
,EL
)
pattern(___,
plots
the projector pattern with additional options specified by one or
more Name,Value
)Name,Value
pair arguments.
returns the projector pattern in [PAT,AZ_ANG,EL_ANG]
= pattern(___)PAT
. The AZ_ANG
output
contains the coordinate values corresponding to the rows of PAT
.
The EL_ANG
output contains the coordinate values
corresponding to the columns of PAT
. If the 'CoordinateSystem'
parameter
is set to 'uv'
, then AZ_ANG
contains
the U coordinates of the pattern and EL_ANG
contains
the V coordinates of the pattern. Otherwise, they
are in angular units in degrees. UV units are dimensionless.
FREQ
— Frequency for computing directivity and patternsFrequencies for computing directivity and patterns, specified as a positive scalar or 1-by-L real-valued row vector. Frequency units are in hertz.
For an antenna, microphone, or sonar hydrophone or
projector element, FREQ
must lie within the range
of values specified by the FrequencyRange
or FrequencyVector
property
of the element. Otherwise, the element produces no response and the
directivity is returned as –Inf
. Most elements
use the FrequencyRange
property except for phased.CustomAntennaElement
and phased.CustomMicrophoneElement
,
which use the FrequencyVector
property.
For an array of elements, FREQ
must
lie within the frequency range of the elements that make up the array.
Otherwise, the array produces no response and the directivity is returned
as –Inf
.
Example: [1e8 2e6]
Data Types: double
AZ
— Azimuth angles[-180:180]
(default) | 1-by-N real-valued row vectorAzimuth angles for computing directivity and pattern, specified as a 1-by-N real-valued row vector where N is the number of azimuth angles. Angle units are in degrees. Azimuth angles must lie between –180° and 180°.
The azimuth angle is the angle between the x-axis and the projection of the direction vector onto the xy plane. When measured from the x-axis toward the y-axis, this angle is positive.
Example: [-45:2:45]
Data Types: double
EL
— Elevation angles[-90:90]
(default) | 1-by-M real-valued row vectorElevation angles for computing directivity and pattern, specified as a 1-by-M real-valued row vector where M is the number of desired elevation directions. Angle units are in degrees. The elevation angle must lie between –90° and 90°.
The elevation angle is the angle between the direction vector and xy-plane. The elevation angle is positive when measured towards the z-axis.
Example: [-75:1:70]
Data Types: double
Specify optional
comma-separated pairs of Name,Value
arguments. Name
is
the argument name and Value
is the corresponding value.
Name
must appear inside quotes. You can specify several name and value
pair arguments in any order as
Name1,Value1,...,NameN,ValueN
.
'CoordinateSystem'
— Plotting coordinate system'polar'
(default) | 'rectangular'
| 'uv'
Plotting coordinate system of the pattern, specified as the
comma-separated pair consisting of 'CoordinateSystem'
and
one of 'polar'
, 'rectangular'
,
or 'uv'
. When 'CoordinateSystem'
is
set to 'polar'
or 'rectangular'
,
the AZ
and EL
arguments
specify the pattern azimuth and elevation, respectively. AZ
values
must lie between –180° and 180°. EL
values
must lie between –90° and 90°. If 'CoordinateSystem'
is
set to 'uv'
, AZ
and EL
then
specify U and V coordinates,
respectively. AZ
and EL
must
lie between -1 and 1.
Example: 'uv'
Data Types: char
'Type'
— Displayed pattern type'directivity'
(default) | 'efield'
| 'power'
| 'powerdb'
Displayed pattern type, specified as the comma-separated pair
consisting of 'Type'
and one of
'directivity'
— directivity
pattern measured in dBi.
'efield'
— field pattern
of the sensor or array. For acoustic sensors, the displayed pattern
is for the scalar sound field.
'power'
— power pattern
of the sensor or array defined as the square of the field pattern.
'powerdb'
— power pattern
converted to dB.
Example: 'powerdb'
Data Types: char
'Normalize'
— Display normalize patterntrue
(default) | false
Display normalized pattern, specified as the comma-separated pair consisting of
'Normalize
' and a Boolean. Set this parameter to
true
to display a normalized pattern. This parameter does not
apply when you set 'Type'
to 'directivity'
.
Directivity patterns are already normalized.
Data Types: logical
'PlotStyle'
— Plotting style'overlay'
(default) | 'waterfall'
'Polarization'
— Polarized field component'combined'
(default) | 'H'
| 'V'
Polarized field component to display, specified as the comma-separated pair consisting of
'Polarization' and 'combined'
, 'H'
, or
'V'
. This parameter applies only when the sensors are
polarization-capable and when the 'Type'
parameter is not set to
'directivity'
. This table shows the meaning of the display
options.
'Polarization' | Display |
---|---|
'combined' | Combined H and V polarization components |
'H' | H polarization component |
'V' | V polarization component |
Example: 'V'
Data Types: char
PAT
— Element patternExamine the response and patterns of an isotropic projector operating between 1 kHz and 10 kHz.
Set the projector parameters and obtain the voltage response at five different elevation angles: -30°, -15°, 0°, 15° and 30°. All elevation angles at 0° azimuth angle. The voltage response is computed at 2 kHz.
projector = phased.IsotropicProjector('FrequencyRange',[1,10]*1e3);
fc = 2e3;
resp = projector(fc,[0,0,0,0,0;-30,-15,0,15,30]);
Draw a 3-D plot of the voltage response.
pattern(projector,fc,[-180:180],[-90:90],'CoordinateSystem','polar', ... 'Type','power')
Examine the response and patterns of an isotropic projector at three different frequencies. The projector operates between 1 kHz and 10 kHz. Specify the voltage response as a vector.
Set up the projector parameters, and obtain the voltage response at 45° azimuth and 30° elevation. Compute the responses at signal frequencies of 2, 5, and 7 kHz.
projector = phased.IsotropicProjector('FrequencyRange',[1 10]*1e3, ... 'VoltageResponse',[90 95 100 95 90]); fc = [2e3 5e3 7e3]; resp = projector(fc,[45;30]); resp
resp = 1×3
0.0426 0.0903 0.0708
Next, draw a 2-D plot of the voltage response as a function of azimuth
pattern(projector,fc,[-180:180],0,'CoordinateSystem','rectangular', ... 'Type','power')
Directivity describes the directionality of the radiation pattern of a sensor element or array of sensor elements.
Higher directivity is desired when you want to transmit more radiation in a specific direction. Directivity is the ratio of the transmitted radiant intensity in a specified direction to the radiant intensity transmitted by an isotropic radiator with the same total transmitted power
where Urad(θ,φ) is the radiant intensity of a transmitter in the direction (θ,φ) and Ptotal is the total power transmitted by an isotropic radiator. For a receiving element or array, directivity measures the sensitivity toward radiation arriving from a specific direction. The principle of reciprocity shows that the directivity of an element or array used for reception equals the directivity of the same element or array used for transmission. When converted to decibels, the directivity is denoted as dBi. For information on directivity, read the notes on Element Directivity and Array Directivity.
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