this was once shared to me on this forum and I find it a great article. There are many good people here who know a lot about antennas and propagation and I found this article fascinating.
https://www.arrl.org/files/file/antplnr.pdf
I find it quite difficult to imagine radio waves bouncing of land though I thought absorption would be much more likely, bounces off of charges in atmospheric layers yes, but land ?. Are most 2,500 mile F2 layer skip hops from sea bounces, which seems much more likely as a reflective surface with less losses. They seem to think approx a 10dB loss per bounce which I imagine varies between 6 and 10dB depending on the atmospheric charge levels / absorption in the atmosphere and attenuation on earth bounces. (Other wise to traverse to the opposite side of the planet from yourself which we know is quite possible we are looking at 5 bounces @ 10dB loss in signal, per bounce 50dB. That is a big ol' attenuation.
Although I guess a +70dB signal at first incidence is quite possible as there is nothing to impede the signal from your antennas line of sight path to the first hop point.
Although one thing that helps me understand that it could bounce off land is the phenomena of moon bounce which is clearly not sea.
It sure would be interesting to see all the places that your signal bounced off of on its way to the other side of the planet. Deserts/oceans, cities etc.
https://www.arrl.org/files/file/antplnr.pdf
I find it quite difficult to imagine radio waves bouncing of land though I thought absorption would be much more likely, bounces off of charges in atmospheric layers yes, but land ?. Are most 2,500 mile F2 layer skip hops from sea bounces, which seems much more likely as a reflective surface with less losses. They seem to think approx a 10dB loss per bounce which I imagine varies between 6 and 10dB depending on the atmospheric charge levels / absorption in the atmosphere and attenuation on earth bounces. (Other wise to traverse to the opposite side of the planet from yourself which we know is quite possible we are looking at 5 bounces @ 10dB loss in signal, per bounce 50dB. That is a big ol' attenuation.
Although I guess a +70dB signal at first incidence is quite possible as there is nothing to impede the signal from your antennas line of sight path to the first hop point.
Although one thing that helps me understand that it could bounce off land is the phenomena of moon bounce which is clearly not sea.
It sure would be interesting to see all the places that your signal bounced off of on its way to the other side of the planet. Deserts/oceans, cities etc.
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