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Thursday, August 18, 2011

ANTENNA eBOOK

Small Antenna Design
By: Douglas B. Miron


Price: $8.30
Format:  Adobe PDF
Availability:  Download Now

Requirements:  Free Adobe Digital Editions
Restrictions:  No printing, No copy and paste
Platforms:  Windows 7/Vista/XP/2000, Mac OS X, Sony Reader, Nook, COOL-ER, BeBook
Features:  Advanced navigation, search, bookmarks, and multiple viewing options.
Small Antenna Design Ebook Summary:
As wireless devices and systems get both smaller and more ubiquitous, the demand for effective but small antennas is rapidly increasing. This book will describe the theory behind effective small antenna design and give design techniques and examples.



Practical Antenna Handbook
Joseph J. Carr’s


Price: $10.00
Format:  Adobe PDF
Availability:  Download Now

Summary
Design and construct your own antennas with step-by-step instructions and plans. Joseph J. Carr’s Practical Antenna Handbook, Fourth Edition, is an update of the most popular book on antennas ever written. This empowering guide blends theoretical concepts that engineers need to design practical antennas with hard-learned lessons derived from actually building and using antennas — real antennas, not merely theoretical constructs on a blackboard. Certain to become the toolbox favorite of radio enthusiasts and professionals of all types, from technicians to citizen banders and shortwave listeners, it covers a wide variety of antennas: high-frequency dipole; vertically polarized HF; multiband and tunable wire; hidden and limited space; directional phased vertical and directional beam VHF/UHF transmitting and receiving; shortwave reception; microwave; and mobile, marine, and emergency. This state-of-the-art edition includes a new chapter on antenna modeling software and new coverage of small transmitting antennas and receiving loop antennas.

Publisher: McGraw-Hill,
Publication: 2001, English
ISBN: 9780071374354,
Pages: 608



ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING



Electrical engineering is a field of engineering that generally deals with the study and application of electricity, electronics and electromagnetism. The field first became an identifiable occupation in the late nineteenth century after commercialization of the electric telegraph and electrical power supply. It now covers a range of subtopics including power, electronics, control systems, signal processing and telecommunications.



Electrical engineering may include electronic engineering. Where a distinction is made, usually outside of the United States, electrical engineering is considered to deal with the problems associated with large-scale electrical systems such as power transmission and motor control, whereas electronic engineering deals with the study of small-scale electronic systems including computers and integrated circuits.[1] Alternatively, electrical engineers are usually concerned with using electricity to transmit energy, while electronic engineers are concerned with using electricity to process information. More recently, the distinction has become blurred by the growth of power electronics.

-Wikipedia-