4,026 research outputs found
Concentrated Ground Plane Booster Antenna Technology for Multiband Operation in Handset Devices
The current demand in the handset antenna field requires multiband antennas due to the existence of multiple communication standards and the emergence of new ones. At the same time, antennas with reduced dimensions are strongly required in order to be easily integrated. In this sense, the paper proposes a compact radiating system that uses two non-resonant elements to properly excite the ground plane to solve the abovementioned shortcomings by minimizing the required Printed Circuit Board (PCB) area while ensuring a multiband performance. These non-resonant elements are called here ground plane boosters since they excite an efficient mode of the ground plane. The proposed radiating system comprises two ground plane boosters of small dimensions of 5 mm x 5 mm x 5 mm. One is in charge of the low frequency region (0.824-0.960 GHz) and the other is in charge of the high frequency region (1.710-2.170 GHz). With the aim of achieving a compact configuration, the two boosters are placed close to each other in a corner of the ground plane of a handset device (concentrated architecture). Several experiments related to the coupling between boosters have been carried out in two different platforms (barphone and smartphone), and the best position and the required matching network are presented. The novel proposal achieves multiband performance at GSM850/900/1800/1900 and UMTS
Classical resolution of black hole singularities via wormholes
In certain extensions of General Relativity, wormholes generated by
spherically symmetric electric fields can resolve black hole singularities
without necessarily removing curvature divergences. This is shown by studying
geodesic completeness, the behavior of time-like congruences going through the
divergent region, and by means of scattering of waves off the wormhole. This
provides an example of the logical independence between curvature divergences
and space-time singularities, concepts very often identified with each other in
the literature.ns of curvature divergences in the context of space-time
singularities.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; several improvements in main body and abstract;
final version to appear in Eur. Phys. J.
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