Author :
Andersen, J. Bach ; Nielsen, J. Ø ; Pedersen, G.F. ; Bauch, G. ; Herdin, M.
Abstract :
In analogy with the established discipline of room acoustics, various aspects of diffuse wideband microwave propagation in a room are treated. It is shown that an equivalent to Sabine´s equation for reverberation time in a room is valid for the completely diffused field, depending only on the volume, the surface area, and an effective absorption coefficient. An exponential decay of the power as a function of the delay is a consequence of the assumptions. Furthermore, the concept of a reverberation distance is also valid. This is the distance from a transmitting antenna where the received diffuse, randomly scattered power equals the direct line-of-sight received power, such that the diffuse power dominates for distances larger than the reverberation distance. A number of measurements in a large room support the theory with an effective absorption coefficient of 0.5. The power delay profiles around the room from a transmitter in the ceiling vary only in the first arriving part of the impulse, whereas the tail, being dominated by the diffuse field, has the same power level for a given delay and the same decay rate all over the room. It is also a consequence of the theory that the diffuse fields incident on an antenna are uniformly distributed in angle.
Keywords :
acoustic wave absorption; acoustic wave scattering; architectural acoustics; electromagnetic wave absorption; electromagnetic wave scattering; reverberation; Sabine´s equation; diffuse field; effective absorption coefficient; exponential decay; microwave propagation; power delay profiles; reverberation distance; reverberation time; room electromagnetics; transmitting antenna; Acoustic propagation; Delay; Electromagnetic propagation; Electromagnetic wave absorption; Equations; Microwave propagation; Receiving antennas; Reverberation; Surface treatment; Wideband;