lanbergld
Member
Hi folks, I've gotten into a days-long discussion with a coworker and we cannot find an answer. It began when I mentioned to him the massive size of longwave broadcast transmitters, and the gargantuan amount of power consumed by them. Examples not only including the European broadcast stations, but also the US Navy's NAA station.
My cohort (not into radios but does have a PhD in a related area) replied something to the effect of "That can't be. Long waves are lower energy so they must be easier to send, energy-wise. Higher frequency stations should require more power than low frequency ones."
I've proposed several reasons to my coworker, including the size of antenna required, but he keeps coming back with the same argument about the low energy in the waves themselves. So I've been trying to find the answer -- Why low frequency stations require the incredible amount of power that they do.
Does anybody know the answer?
Larry Lanberg
Richmond VA
My cohort (not into radios but does have a PhD in a related area) replied something to the effect of "That can't be. Long waves are lower energy so they must be easier to send, energy-wise. Higher frequency stations should require more power than low frequency ones."
I've proposed several reasons to my coworker, including the size of antenna required, but he keeps coming back with the same argument about the low energy in the waves themselves. So I've been trying to find the answer -- Why low frequency stations require the incredible amount of power that they do.
Does anybody know the answer?
Larry Lanberg
Richmond VA