DocumentCode
1363917
Title
Predictability of radiation in vertical directions based on in situ measurements close to the ground at frequencies above 30 MHz
Author
Macfarlane, Ian P.
Author_Institution
EMC, Vic., Australia
Volume
38
Issue
3
fYear
1996
fDate
8/1/1996 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
525
Lastpage
531
Abstract
National and international standards specify limits for the radiated disturbances created by industrial, scientific, and medical (ISM) radio-frequency equipment. The in situ E-field limits they specify above 30 MHz apply at heights above ground of 6 m or less. The international standard CISPR 11 specifies limits at a fixed height of 3 m. The US FCC specifies 1-4 m or 26 m height scans, subject to measuring distance. Specified measuring distances vary. For protection of aeronautical safety of life services, CISPR 11 specifies in situ limits 10 m from the exterior wall of the building housing the ISM equipment. The actual distance from the ISM equipment is not specified. This paper considers the predictability of radiation in vertical directions based on in situ measurements using the CISPR and FCC methods. The paper shows that the ISM fields measured by those methods are very poor guides to the fields at elevated angles. In consequence, the specified in situ limits cannot deliver the protection they are assumed to provide for aeronautical safety services. Recommendations are provided to improve the predictability of the fields at elevated angles
Keywords
aircraft; electric field measurement; measurement standards; radiofrequency interference; safety; 1 to 4 m; 2 to 6 m; 3 m; 30 MHz; 6 m; CISPR 11; FCC; ISM fields measurement; ISM radiofrequency equipment; aeronautical safety services; elevated angles; frequencies; ground; in situ E-field limits; in situ measurements; industrial RF equipment; international standards; measuring distance; medical RF equipment; national standards; radiated disturbances; radiation predictability; scientific RF equipment; vertical directions; Electromagnetic compatibility; FCC; Genetic algorithms; Machine learning algorithms; Magnetic field measurement; Medical simulation; Protection; Radiation safety; Radio frequency; Simulated annealing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Electromagnetic Compatibility, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9375
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/15.536086
Filename
536086
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