Professional Documents
Culture Documents
a. Impossibility of a good
ground connection
b. Protection of personnel
working underneath
d. must be horizontally
polarized
2. One of the following consists of
non-resonant antennas:
a. The rhombic antenna
b. The folded dipole
c. The end-fire array
d. The broadside array
3. One of the following is very useful
as a multiband HF receiving
antenna. This is the:
a. Conical horn
b. Folded dipole
c. Log-periodic
d. Square loop
4. Which of the following antennas is
best excited from a waveguide?
a. Biconical
b. Horn
c. Helical
d. Discone
5. Indicate which of the following
reasons for using a counterpoise
with antennas is false:
working underneath
d. Improvement of the radiation
pattern of the antenna
9. Which one the following terms does
not apply to the Yagi-Uda array?
a. Good bandwidth
b. Parasitic elements
c. Folded dipole
d. High gain
10. An antenna that is circularly
polarized is the
a. Helical
b. Small circular loop
c. Parabolic reflector
d. Yagi-Uda
11. The standard reference antenna for
the directive gain is the
a. Infinitesimal dipole
b. Isotropic antenna
c. Elementary doublet
d. Half-wave dipole
12. Top loading is sometimes used with
an antenna in order to increase its
a. Effective height
b. Bandwidth
c. Beamwidth
d. Input capacitance
13. Cassegrain feed is used with a
parabolic reflector to
a. Increase the gain of the
system
b. Increase the beamwidth of
the system
c. Reduce the size of the main
reflector
d. Allow the feed to be place at
a convenient point
14. Zooming is used with a dielectric
antenna in order to
a. Reduce the bulk of the lens
b. Increase the bandwidth of
the lens
c. Permit pin-point focusing
d. Correct the curvature of the
wavefront from a horn that is
too short
15. A helical antenna is used for
satellite tracking because of its
a. Circular polarization
b. Maneuverability
c. Broad bandwidth
d. Good front-to-back ratio
16. The discone antenna is
a. A useful direction-finding
antenna
b. Used as a radar receiving
antenna
c. Circularly polarized like other
circular antennas
d. Useful as UHF receiving
antenna
17. One of the following is not an
omnidirectional antenna:
a. Half-wave dipole
b. Log-periodic
c. Discone
d. Marconi
18. A receiving antenna with a
built-in-preamplifier.
a. Passive antenna
b. Active antenna
c. Active passive antenna
d. None of the above
19. An enclosure lined with material
that absorbs electromagnetic
radiation
a. Echoic chamber
b. Unechoic chamber
c. Echoical chamber
d. Anechoic chamber
20. Angle measured upward from the
horizon. Used to describe antenna
patterns and directions
a. Angle of elevation
b. Angle of inclination
c. Beamwidth
d. Bandwidth
21. A device to radiate or receive
electromagnetic radiation at radio
frequencies
a. Receiver
b. Router
c. Antenna
d. Transmitter
22. An antenna system composed of
two or more simpler antenna
elements
a. Dipole
b. Array
c. Element
d. Zenith
23. The angle between the points on the
major lobe of an antenna at which
the radiated power density is
one-half its maximum value
a. Angle of elevation
b. Angle of inclination
c. Beamwidth
d. Bandwidth
24. Any antenna consisting of a single
conductor with zero current only at
its two ends.
a. Dipole
b. Array
c. Element
d. Zenith
25. The ratio of the maximum to the
average radiation intensity for an
antenna
a. Relativity
b. Directivity
c. Front-to-back ratio
d. Back-to-front ratio
d. Main lobe
31. An antenna with a current null at
one end and a maximum at the
other, with no other nulls in between
a. Dipole
b. Monopole
c. Side pole
d. None of the above
32. The region close to an antenna,
where local inductive and capacitive
effects predominate
a. Center-field region
b. Near-field region
c. Far-field region
d. Mid-field region
33. The directional of the electric field
vector of an electromagnetic wave
a. Radiation
b. Polarization
c. Relativity
d. Directivity
34. A minor lobe at an angle of
approximately 90 to the main lobe
a. Dipole
b. Monopole
c. Side pole
d. None of the above
35. Equivalent resistance at the
feedpoint corresponding to the
radiation of energy by an antenna
a. Polarization resistance
b. Polarization impedance
c. Radiation resistance
d. Radiation impedance