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Wikipedia

Microwave

Microwave is a form of electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths ranging from about one meter to one millimeter corresponding to frequencies between 300 MHz and 300 GHz respectively.[1][2][3][4][5] Different sources define different frequency ranges as microwaves; the above broad definition includes UHF, SHF and EHF (millimeter wave) bands. A more common definition in radio-frequency engineering is the range between 1 and 100 GHz (wavelengths between 0.3 m and 3 mm).[2] In all cases, microwaves include the entire SHF band (3 to 30 GHz, or 10 to 1 cm) at minimum. Frequencies in the microwave range are often referred to by their IEEE radar band designations: S, C, X, Ku, K, or Ka band, or by similar NATO or EU designations.

A telecommunications tower with a variety of dish antennas for microwave relay links on Frazier Peak, Ventura County, California. The apertures of the dishes are covered by plastic sheets (radomes) to keep out moisture.

The prefix micro- in microwave is not meant to suggest a wavelength in the micrometer range. Rather, it indicates that microwaves are "small" (having shorter wavelengths), compared to the radio waves used prior to microwave technology. The boundaries between far infrared, terahertz radiation, microwaves, and ultra-high-frequency radio waves are fairly arbitrary and are used variously between different fields of study.

Microwaves travel by line-of-sight; unlike lower frequency radio waves, they do not diffract around hills, follow the earth's surface as ground waves, or reflect from the ionosphere, so terrestrial microwave communication links are limited by the visual horizon to about 40 miles (64 km). At the high end of the band, they are absorbed by gases in the atmosphere, limiting practical communication distances to around a kilometer. Microwaves are widely used in modern technology, for example in point-to-point communication links, wireless networks, microwave radio relay networks, radar, satellite and spacecraft communication, medical diathermy and cancer treatment, remote sensing, radio astronomy, particle accelerators, spectroscopy, industrial heating, collision avoidance systems, garage door openers and keyless entry systems, and for cooking food in microwave ovens.

Electromagnetic spectrum

Microwaves occupy a place in the electromagnetic spectrum with frequency above ordinary radio waves, and below infrared light:

Electromagnetic spectrum
Name Wavelength Frequency (Hz) Photon energy (eV)
Gamma ray < 0.01 nm > 30 EHz > 124 keV
X-ray 0.01 nm – 10 nm 30 EHz – 30 PHz 124 keV – 124 eV
Ultraviolet 10 nm – 400 nm 30 PHz – 750 THz 124 eV – 3 eV
Visible light 400 nm – 750 nm 750 THz – 400 THz 3 eV – 1.7 eV
Infrared 750 nm – 1 mm 400 THz – 300 GHz 1.7 eV – 1.24 meV
Microwave 1 mm – 1 m 300 GHz – 300 MHz 1.24 meV – 1.24 µeV
Radio ≥ 1 m ≤ 300 MHz ≤ 1.24 µeV

In descriptions of the electromagnetic spectrum, some sources classify microwaves as radio waves, a subset of the radio wave band, while others classify microwaves and radio waves as distinct types of radiation. This is an arbitrary distinction.

Propagation

 
The atmospheric attenuation of microwaves and far infrared radiation in dry air with a precipitable water vapor level of 0.001 mm. The downward spikes in the graph correspond to frequencies at which microwaves are absorbed more strongly. This graph includes a range of frequencies from 0 to 1 THz; the microwaves are the subset in the range between 0.3 and 300 gigahertz.

Microwaves travel solely by line-of-sight paths; unlike lower frequency radio waves, they do not travel as ground waves which follow the contour of the Earth, or reflect off the ionosphere (skywaves).[6] Although at the low end of the band they can pass through building walls enough for useful reception, usually rights of way cleared to the first Fresnel zone are required. Therefore, on the surface of the Earth, microwave communication links are limited by the visual horizon to about 30–40 miles (48–64 km). Microwaves are absorbed by moisture in the atmosphere, and the attenuation increases with frequency, becoming a significant factor (rain fade) at the high end of the band. Beginning at about 40 GHz, atmospheric gases also begin to absorb microwaves, so above this frequency microwave transmission is limited to a few kilometers. A spectral band structure causes absorption peaks at specific frequencies (see graph at right). Above 100 GHz, the absorption of electromagnetic radiation by Earth's atmosphere is so great that it is in effect opaque, until the atmosphere becomes transparent again in the so-called infrared and optical window frequency ranges.

Troposcatter

In a microwave beam directed at an angle into the sky, a small amount of the power will be randomly scattered as the beam passes through the troposphere.[6] A sensitive receiver beyond the horizon with a high gain antenna focused on that area of the troposphere can pick up the signal. This technique has been used at frequencies between 0.45 and 5 GHz in tropospheric scatter (troposcatter) communication systems to communicate beyond the horizon, at distances up to 300 km.

Antennas

 
Waveguide is used to carry microwaves. Example of waveguides and a diplexer in an air traffic control radar

The short wavelengths of microwaves allow omnidirectional antennas for portable devices to be made very small, from 1 to 20 centimeters long, so microwave frequencies are widely used for wireless devices such as cell phones, cordless phones, and wireless LANs (Wi-Fi) access for laptops, and Bluetooth earphones. Antennas used include short whip antennas, rubber ducky antennas, sleeve dipoles, patch antennas, and increasingly the printed circuit inverted F antenna (PIFA) used in cell phones.

Their short wavelength also allows narrow beams of microwaves to be produced by conveniently small high gain antennas from a half meter to 5 meters in diameter. Therefore, beams of microwaves are used for point-to-point communication links, and for radar. An advantage of narrow beams is that they do not interfere with nearby equipment using the same frequency, allowing frequency reuse by nearby transmitters. Parabolic ("dish") antennas are the most widely used directive antennas at microwave frequencies, but horn antennas, slot antennas and lens antennas are also used. Flat microstrip antennas are being increasingly used in consumer devices. Another directive antenna practical at microwave frequencies is the phased array, a computer-controlled array of antennas that produces a beam that can be electronically steered in different directions.

At microwave frequencies, the transmission lines which are used to carry lower frequency radio waves to and from antennas, such as coaxial cable and parallel wire lines, have excessive power losses, so when low attenuation is required, microwaves are carried by metal pipes called waveguides. Due to the high cost and maintenance requirements of waveguide runs, in many microwave antennas the output stage of the transmitter or the RF front end of the receiver is located at the antenna.

Design and analysis

The term microwave also has a more technical meaning in electromagnetics and circuit theory.[7][8] Apparatus and techniques may be described qualitatively as "microwave" when the wavelengths of signals are roughly the same as the dimensions of the circuit, so that lumped-element circuit theory is inaccurate, and instead distributed circuit elements and transmission-line theory are more useful methods for design and analysis.

As a consequence, practical microwave circuits tend to move away from the discrete resistors, capacitors, and inductors used with lower-frequency radio waves. Open-wire and coaxial transmission lines used at lower frequencies are replaced by waveguides and stripline, and lumped-element tuned circuits are replaced by cavity resonators or resonant stubs.[7] In turn, at even higher frequencies, where the wavelength of the electromagnetic waves becomes small in comparison to the size of the structures used to process them, microwave techniques become inadequate, and the methods of optics are used.

Microwave sources

 
 
Cutaway view inside a cavity magnetron as used in a microwave oven (left). Antenna splitter: microstrip techniques become increasingly necessary at higher frequencies (right).
 
Disassembled radar speed gun. The grey assembly attached to the end of the copper-colored horn antenna is the Gunn diode which generates the microwaves.

High-power microwave sources use specialized vacuum tubes to generate microwaves. These devices operate on different principles from low-frequency vacuum tubes, using the ballistic motion of electrons in a vacuum under the influence of controlling electric or magnetic fields, and include the magnetron (used in microwave ovens), klystron, traveling-wave tube (TWT), and gyrotron. These devices work in the density modulated mode, rather than the current modulated mode. This means that they work on the basis of clumps of electrons flying ballistically through them, rather than using a continuous stream of electrons.

Low-power microwave sources use solid-state devices such as the field-effect transistor (at least at lower frequencies), tunnel diodes, Gunn diodes, and IMPATT diodes.[9] Low-power sources are available as benchtop instruments, rackmount instruments, embeddable modules and in card-level formats. A maser is a solid-state device which amplifies microwaves using similar principles to the laser, which amplifies higher frequency light waves.

All warm objects emit low level microwave black-body radiation, depending on their temperature, so in meteorology and remote sensing, microwave radiometers are used to measure the temperature of objects or terrain.[10] The sun[11] and other astronomical radio sources such as Cassiopeia A emit low level microwave radiation which carries information about their makeup, which is studied by radio astronomers using receivers called radio telescopes.[10] The cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR), for example, is a weak microwave noise filling empty space which is a major source of information on cosmology's Big Bang theory of the origin of the Universe.

Microwave uses

Microwave technology is extensively used for point-to-point telecommunications (i.e., non-broadcast uses). Microwaves are especially suitable for this use since they are more easily focused into narrower beams than radio waves, allowing frequency reuse; their comparatively higher frequencies allow broad bandwidth and high data transmission rates, and antenna sizes are smaller than at lower frequencies because antenna size is inversely proportional to the transmitted frequency. Microwaves are used in spacecraft communication, and much of the world's data, TV, and telephone communications are transmitted long distances by microwaves between ground stations and communications satellites. Microwaves are also employed in microwave ovens and in radar technology.

Communication

 
A satellite dish on a residence, which receives satellite television over a Ku band 12–14 GHz microwave beam from a direct broadcast communications satellite in a geostationary orbit 35,700 kilometres (22,000 miles) above the Earth

Before the advent of fiber-optic transmission, most long-distance telephone calls were carried via networks of microwave radio relay links run by carriers such as AT&T Long Lines. Starting in the early 1950s, frequency-division multiplexing was used to send up to 5,400 telephone channels on each microwave radio channel, with as many as ten radio channels combined into one antenna for the hop to the next site, up to 70 km away.

Wireless LAN protocols, such as Bluetooth and the IEEE 802.11 specifications used for Wi-Fi, also use microwaves in the 2.4 GHz ISM band, although 802.11a uses ISM band and U-NII frequencies in the 5 GHz range. Licensed long-range (up to about 25 km) Wireless Internet Access services have been used for almost a decade in many countries in the 3.5–4.0 GHz range. The FCC recently[when?] carved out spectrum for carriers that wish to offer services in this range in the U.S. — with emphasis on 3.65 GHz. Dozens of service providers across the country are securing or have already received licenses from the FCC to operate in this band. The WIMAX service offerings that can be carried on the 3.65 GHz band will give business customers another option for connectivity.

Metropolitan area network (MAN) protocols, such as WiMAX (Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access) are based on standards such as IEEE 802.16, designed to operate between 2 and 11 GHz. Commercial implementations are in the 2.3 GHz, 2.5 GHz, 3.5 GHz and 5.8 GHz ranges.

Mobile Broadband Wireless Access (MBWA) protocols based on standards specifications such as IEEE 802.20 or ATIS/ANSI HC-SDMA (such as iBurst) operate between 1.6 and 2.3 GHz to give mobility and in-building penetration characteristics similar to mobile phones but with vastly greater spectral efficiency.[12]

Some mobile phone networks, like GSM, use the low-microwave/high-UHF frequencies around 1.8 and 1.9 GHz in the Americas and elsewhere, respectively. DVB-SH and S-DMB use 1.452 to 1.492 GHz, while proprietary/incompatible satellite radio in the U.S. uses around 2.3 GHz for DARS.

Microwave radio is used in broadcasting and telecommunication transmissions because, due to their short wavelength, highly directional antennas are smaller and therefore more practical than they would be at longer wavelengths (lower frequencies). There is also more bandwidth in the microwave spectrum than in the rest of the radio spectrum; the usable bandwidth below 300 MHz is less than 300 MHz while many GHz can be used above 300 MHz. Typically, microwaves are used in television news to transmit a signal from a remote location to a television station from a specially equipped van. See broadcast auxiliary service (BAS), remote pickup unit (RPU), and studio/transmitter link (STL).

Most satellite communications systems operate in the C, X, Ka, or Ku bands of the microwave spectrum. These frequencies allow large bandwidth while avoiding the crowded UHF frequencies and staying below the atmospheric absorption of EHF frequencies. Satellite TV either operates in the C band for the traditional large dish fixed satellite service or Ku band for direct-broadcast satellite. Military communications run primarily over X or Ku-band links, with Ka band being used for Milstar.

Navigation

Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) including the Chinese Beidou, the American Global Positioning System (introduced in 1978) and the Russian GLONASS broadcast navigational signals in various bands between about 1.2 GHz and 1.6 GHz.

Radar

 
The parabolic antenna (lower curved surface) of an ASR-9 airport surveillance radar which radiates a narrow vertical fan-shaped beam of 2.7–2.9 GHz (S band) microwaves to locate aircraft in the airspace surrounding an airport.

Radar is a radiolocation technique in which a beam of radio waves emitted by a transmitter bounces off an object and returns to a receiver, allowing the location, range, speed, and other characteristics of the object to be determined. The short wavelength of microwaves causes large reflections from objects the size of motor vehicles, ships and aircraft. Also, at these wavelengths, the high gain antennas such as parabolic antennas which are required to produce the narrow beamwidths needed to accurately locate objects are conveniently small, allowing them to be rapidly turned to scan for objects. Therefore, microwave frequencies are the main frequencies used in radar. Microwave radar is widely used for applications such as air traffic control, weather forecasting, navigation of ships, and speed limit enforcement. Long-distance radars use the lower microwave frequencies since at the upper end of the band atmospheric absorption limits the range, but millimeter waves are used for short-range radar such as collision avoidance systems.

 
Some of the dish antennas of the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) a radio telescope located in northern Chile. It receives microwaves in the millimeter wave range, 31 – 1000 GHz.
 
Maps of the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR), showing the improved resolution which has been achieved with better microwave radio telescopes

Radio astronomy

Microwaves emitted by astronomical radio sources; planets, stars, galaxies, and nebulas are studied in radio astronomy with large dish antennas called radio telescopes. In addition to receiving naturally occurring microwave radiation, radio telescopes have been used in active radar experiments to bounce microwaves off planets in the solar system, to determine the distance to the Moon or map the invisible surface of Venus through cloud cover.

A recently completed microwave radio telescope is the Atacama Large Millimeter Array, located at more than 5,000 meters (16,597 ft) altitude in Chile, which observes the universe in the millimeter and submillimeter wavelength ranges. The world's largest ground-based astronomy project to date, it consists of more than 66 dishes and was built in an international collaboration by Europe, North America, East Asia and Chile.[13][14]

A major recent focus of microwave radio astronomy has been mapping the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR) discovered in 1964 by radio astronomers Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson. This faint background radiation, which fills the universe and is almost the same in all directions, is "relic radiation" from the Big Bang, and is one of the few sources of information about conditions in the early universe. Due to the expansion and thus cooling of the Universe, the originally high-energy radiation has been shifted into the microwave region of the radio spectrum. Sufficiently sensitive radio telescopes can detect the CMBR as a faint signal that is not associated with any star, galaxy, or other object.[15]

Heating and power application

 
Small microwave oven on a kitchen counter
 
Microwaves are widely used for heating in industrial processes. A microwave tunnel oven for softening plastic rods prior to extrusion.

A microwave oven passes microwave radiation at a frequency near 2.45 GHz (12 cm) through food, causing dielectric heating primarily by absorption of the energy in water. Microwave ovens became common kitchen appliances in Western countries in the late 1970s, following the development of less expensive cavity magnetrons. Water in the liquid state possesses many molecular interactions that broaden the absorption peak. In the vapor phase, isolated water molecules absorb at around 22 GHz, almost ten times the frequency of the microwave oven.

Microwave heating is used in industrial processes for drying and curing products.

Many semiconductor processing techniques use microwaves to generate plasma for such purposes as reactive ion etching and plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD).

Microwaves are used in stellarators and tokamak experimental fusion reactors to help break down the gas into a plasma and heat it to very high temperatures. The frequency is tuned to the cyclotron resonance of the electrons in the magnetic field, anywhere between 2–200 GHz, hence it is often referred to as Electron Cyclotron Resonance Heating (ECRH). The upcoming ITER thermonuclear reactor[16] will use up to 20 MW of 170 GHz microwaves.

Microwaves can be used to transmit power over long distances, and post-World War 2 research was done to examine possibilities. NASA worked in the 1970s and early 1980s to research the possibilities of using solar power satellite (SPS) systems with large solar arrays that would beam power down to the Earth's surface via microwaves.

Less-than-lethal weaponry exists that uses millimeter waves to heat a thin layer of human skin to an intolerable temperature so as to make the targeted person move away. A two-second burst of the 95 GHz focused beam heats the skin to a temperature of 54 °C (129 °F) at a depth of 0.4 millimetres (164 in). The United States Air Force and Marines are currently using this type of active denial system in fixed installations.[17]

Spectroscopy

Microwave radiation is used in electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR or ESR) spectroscopy, typically in the X-band region (~9 GHz) in conjunction typically with magnetic fields of 0.3 T. This technique provides information on unpaired electrons in chemical systems, such as free radicals or transition metal ions such as Cu(II). Microwave radiation is also used to perform rotational spectroscopy and can be combined with electrochemistry as in microwave enhanced electrochemistry.

Microwave frequency bands

Bands of frequencies in the microwave spectrum are designated by letters. Unfortunately, there are several incompatible band designation systems, and even within a system the frequency ranges corresponding to some of the letters vary somewhat between different application fields.[18][19] The letter system had its origin in World War 2 in a top-secret U.S. classification of bands used in radar sets; this is the origin of the oldest letter system, the IEEE radar bands. One set of microwave frequency bands designations by the Radio Society of Great Britain (RSGB), is tabulated below:

Microwave frequency bands
Designation Frequency range Wavelength range Typical uses
L band 1 to 2 GHz 15 cm to 30 cm military telemetry, GPS, mobile phones (GSM), amateur radio
S band 2 to 4 GHz 7.5 cm to 15 cm weather radar, surface ship radar, some communications satellites, microwave ovens, microwave devices/communications, radio astronomy, mobile phones, wireless LAN, Bluetooth, ZigBee, GPS, amateur radio
C band 4 to 8 GHz 3.75 cm to 7.5 cm long-distance radio telecommunications
X band 8 to 12 GHz 25 mm to 37.5 mm satellite communications, radar, terrestrial broadband, space communications, amateur radio, molecular rotational spectroscopy
Ku band 12 to 18 GHz 16.7 mm to 25 mm satellite communications, molecular rotational spectroscopy
K band 18 to 26.5 GHz 11.3 mm to 16.7 mm radar, satellite communications, astronomical observations, automotive radar, molecular rotational spectroscopy
Ka band 26.5 to 40 GHz 5.0 mm to 11.3 mm satellite communications, molecular rotational spectroscopy
Q band 33 to 50 GHz 6.0 mm to 9.0 mm satellite communications, terrestrial microwave communications, radio astronomy, automotive radar, molecular rotational spectroscopy
U band 40 to 60 GHz 5.0 mm to 7.5 mm
V band 50 to 75 GHz 4.0 mm to 6.0 mm millimeter wave radar research, molecular rotational spectroscopy and other kinds of scientific research
W band 75 to 110 GHz 2.7 mm to 4.0 mm satellite communications, millimeter-wave radar research, military radar targeting and tracking applications, and some non-military applications, automotive radar
F band 90 to 140 GHz 2.1 mm to 3.3 mm SHF transmissions: Radio astronomy, microwave devices/communications, wireless LAN, most modern radars, communications satellites, satellite television broadcasting, DBS, amateur radio
D band 110 to 170 GHz 1.8 mm to 2.7 mm EHF transmissions: Radio astronomy, high-frequency microwave radio relay, microwave remote sensing, amateur radio, directed-energy weapon, millimeter wave scanner

Other definitions exist.[20]

The term P band is sometimes used for UHF frequencies below the L band but is now obsolete per IEEE Std 521.

When radars were first developed at K band during World War 2, it was not known that there was a nearby absorption band (due to water vapor and oxygen in the atmosphere). To avoid this problem, the original K band was split into a lower band, Ku, and upper band, Ka.[21]

Microwave frequency measurement

 
Absorption wavemeter for measuring in the Ku band.

Microwave frequency can be measured by either electronic or mechanical techniques.

Frequency counters or high frequency heterodyne systems can be used. Here the unknown frequency is compared with harmonics of a known lower frequency by use of a low-frequency generator, a harmonic generator and a mixer. The accuracy of the measurement is limited by the accuracy and stability of the reference source.

Mechanical methods require a tunable resonator such as an absorption wavemeter, which has a known relation between a physical dimension and frequency.

In a laboratory setting, Lecher lines can be used to directly measure the wavelength on a transmission line made of parallel wires, the frequency can then be calculated. A similar technique is to use a slotted waveguide or slotted coaxial line to directly measure the wavelength. These devices consist of a probe introduced into the line through a longitudinal slot so that the probe is free to travel up and down the line. Slotted lines are primarily intended for measurement of the voltage standing wave ratio on the line. However, provided a standing wave is present, they may also be used to measure the distance between the nodes, which is equal to half the wavelength. The precision of this method is limited by the determination of the nodal locations.

Effects on health

Microwaves are non-ionizing radiation, which means that microwave photons do not contain sufficient energy to ionize molecules or break chemical bonds, or cause DNA damage, as ionizing radiation such as x-rays or ultraviolet can.[22] The word "radiation" refers to energy radiating from a source and not to radioactivity. The main effect of absorption of microwaves is to heat materials; the electromagnetic fields cause polar molecules to vibrate. It has not been shown conclusively that microwaves (or other non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation) have significant adverse biological effects at low levels. Some, but not all, studies suggest that long-term exposure may have a carcinogenic effect.[23]

During World War II, it was observed that individuals in the radiation path of radar installations experienced clicks and buzzing sounds in response to microwave radiation. Research by NASA in the 1970s has shown this to be caused by thermal expansion in parts of the inner ear. In 1955 Dr. James Lovelock was able to reanimate rats chilled to 0 and 1 °C (32 and 34 °F) using microwave diathermy.[24]

When injury from exposure to microwaves occurs, it usually results from dielectric heating induced in the body. The lens and cornea of the eye are especially vulnerable because they contain no blood vessels that can carry away heat. Exposure to microwave radiation can produce cataracts by this mechanism, because the microwave heating denatures proteins in the crystalline lens of the eye[25] (in the same way that heat turns egg whites white and opaque). Exposure to heavy doses of microwave radiation (as from an oven that has been tampered with to allow operation even with the door open) can produce heat damage in other tissues as well, up to and including serious burns that may not be immediately evident because of the tendency for microwaves to heat deeper tissues with higher moisture content.

History

Hertzian optics

Microwaves were first generated in the 1890s in some of the earliest radio experiments by physicists who thought of them as a form of "invisible light".[26] James Clerk Maxwell in his 1873 theory of electromagnetism, now called Maxwell's equations, had predicted that a coupled electric field and magnetic field could travel through space as an electromagnetic wave, and proposed that light consisted of electromagnetic waves of short wavelength. In 1888, German physicist Heinrich Hertz was the first to demonstrate the existence of electromagnetic waves, generating radio waves using a primitive spark gap radio transmitter.[27]

Hertz and the other early radio researchers were interested in exploring the similarities between radio waves and light waves, to test Maxwell's theory. They concentrated on producing short wavelength radio waves in the UHF and microwave ranges, with which they could duplicate classic optics experiments in their laboratories, using quasioptical components such as prisms and lenses made of paraffin, sulfur and pitch and wire diffraction gratings, to refract and diffract radio waves like light rays.[28] Hertz produced waves up to 450 MHz; his directional 450 MHz transmitter consisted of a 26 cm brass rod dipole antenna with a spark gap between the ends, suspended at the focal line of a parabolic antenna made of a curved zinc sheet, powered by high voltage pulses from an induction coil.[27] His historic experiments demonstrated that radio waves like light exhibited refraction, diffraction, polarization, interference and standing waves,[28] proving that radio waves and light waves were both forms of Maxwell's electromagnetic waves.

 
1.2 GHz microwave spark transmitter (left) and coherer receiver (right) used by Guglielmo Marconi during his 1895 experiments had a range of 6.5 km (4.0 mi)

Beginning in 1894 Indian physicist Jagadish Chandra Bose performed the first experiments with microwaves. He was the first person to produce millimeter waves, generating frequencies up to 60 GHz (5 millimeter) using a 3 mm metal ball spark oscillator.[29][28] Bose also invented waveguide, horn antennas, and semiconductor crystal detectors for use in his experiments. Independently in 1894, Oliver Lodge and Augusto Righi experimented with 1.5 and 12 GHz microwaves respectively, generated by small metal ball spark resonators.[28] Russian physicist Pyotr Lebedev in 1895 generated 50 GHz millimeter waves.[28] In 1897 Lord Rayleigh solved the mathematical boundary-value problem of electromagnetic waves propagating through conducting tubes and dielectric rods of arbitrary shape.[30][31][32][33] which gave the modes and cutoff frequency of microwaves propagating through a waveguide.[27]

However, since microwaves were limited to line of sight paths, they could not communicate beyond the visual horizon, and the low power of the spark transmitters then in use limited their practical range to a few miles. The subsequent development of radio communication after 1896 employed lower frequencies, which could travel beyond the horizon as ground waves and by reflecting off the ionosphere as skywaves, and microwave frequencies were not further explored at this time.

First microwave communication experiments

Practical use of microwave frequencies did not occur until the 1940s and 1950s due to a lack of adequate sources, since the triode vacuum tube (valve) electronic oscillator used in radio transmitters could not produce frequencies above a few hundred megahertz due to excessive electron transit time and interelectrode capacitance.[27] By the 1930s, the first low-power microwave vacuum tubes had been developed using new principles; the Barkhausen–Kurz tube and the split-anode magnetron.[27] These could generate a few watts of power at frequencies up to a few gigahertz and were used in the first experiments in communication with microwaves.

In 1931 an Anglo-French consortium headed by Andre C. Clavier demonstrated the first experimental microwave relay link, across the English Channel 40 miles (64 km) between Dover, UK and Calais, France.[34][35] The system transmitted telephony, telegraph and facsimile data over bidirectional 1.7 GHz beams with a power of one-half watt, produced by miniature Barkhausen–Kurz tubes at the focus of 10-foot (3 m) metal dishes.

A word was needed to distinguish these new shorter wavelengths, which had previously been lumped into the "short wave" band, which meant all waves shorter than 200 meters. The terms quasi-optical waves and ultrashort waves were used briefly but did not catch on. The first usage of the word micro-wave apparently occurred in 1931.[35][36]

Radar

The development of radar, mainly in secrecy, before and during World War II, resulted in the technological advances which made microwaves practical.[27] Wavelengths in the centimeter range were required to give the small radar antennas which were compact enough to fit on aircraft a narrow enough beamwidth to localize enemy aircraft. It was found that conventional transmission lines used to carry radio waves had excessive power losses at microwave frequencies, and George Southworth at Bell Labs and Wilmer Barrow at MIT independently invented waveguide in 1936.[30] Barrow invented the horn antenna in 1938 as a means to efficiently radiate microwaves into or out of a waveguide. In a microwave receiver, a nonlinear component was needed that would act as a detector and mixer at these frequencies, as vacuum tubes had too much capacitance. To fill this need researchers resurrected an obsolete technology, the point contact crystal detector (cat whisker detector) which was used as a demodulator in crystal radios around the turn of the century before vacuum tube receivers.[27][37] The low capacitance of semiconductor junctions allowed them to function at microwave frequencies. The first modern silicon and germanium diodes were developed as microwave detectors in the 1930s, and the principles of semiconductor physics learned during their development led to semiconductor electronics after the war.[27]

The first powerful sources of microwaves were invented at the beginning of World War II: the klystron tube by Russell and Sigurd Varian at Stanford University in 1937, and the cavity magnetron tube by John Randall and Harry Boot at Birmingham University, UK in 1940.[27] Ten centimeter (3 GHz) microwave radar was in use on British warplanes in late 1941 and proved to be a game changer. Britain's 1940 decision to share its microwave technology with its US ally (the Tizard Mission) significantly shortened the war. The MIT Radiation Laboratory established secretly at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1940 to research radar, produced much of the theoretical knowledge necessary to use microwaves. The first microwave relay systems were developed by the Allied military near the end of the war and used for secure battlefield communication networks in the European theater.

Post World War II

After World War II, microwaves were rapidly exploited commercially.[27] Due to their high frequency they had a very large information-carrying capacity (bandwidth); a single microwave beam could carry tens of thousands of phone calls. In the 1950s and 60s transcontinental microwave relay networks were built in the US and Europe to exchange telephone calls between cities and distribute television programs. In the new television broadcasting industry, from the 1940s microwave dishes were used to transmit backhaul video feeds from mobile production trucks back to the studio, allowing the first remote TV broadcasts. The first communications satellites were launched in the 1960s, which relayed telephone calls and television between widely separated points on Earth using microwave beams. In 1964, Arno Penzias and Robert Woodrow Wilson while investigating noise in a satellite horn antenna at Bell Labs, Holmdel, New Jersey discovered cosmic microwave background radiation.

 
C-band horn antennas at a telephone switching center in Seattle, belonging to AT&T's Long Lines microwave relay network built in the 1960s.
 
Microwave lens antenna used in the radar for the 1954 Nike Ajax anti-aircraft missile
 
The first commercial microwave oven, Amana's Radarange, installed in the kitchen of US merchant ship NS Savannah in 1961

Microwave radar became the central technology used in air traffic control, maritime navigation, anti-aircraft defense, ballistic missile detection, and later many other uses. Radar and satellite communication motivated the development of modern microwave antennas; the parabolic antenna (the most common type), cassegrain antenna, lens antenna, slot antenna, and phased array.

The ability of short waves to quickly heat materials and cook food had been investigated in the 1930s by I. F. Mouromtseff at Westinghouse, and at the 1933 Chicago World's Fair demonstrated cooking meals with a 60 MHz radio transmitter.[38] In 1945 Percy Spencer, an engineer working on radar at Raytheon, noticed that microwave radiation from a magnetron oscillator melted a candy bar in his pocket. He investigated cooking with microwaves and invented the microwave oven, consisting of a magnetron feeding microwaves into a closed metal cavity containing food, which was patented by Raytheon on 8 October 1945. Due to their expense microwave ovens were initially used in institutional kitchens, but by 1986 roughly 25% of households in the U.S. owned one. Microwave heating became widely used as an industrial process in industries such as plastics fabrication, and as a medical therapy to kill cancer cells in microwave hyperthermy.

The traveling wave tube (TWT) developed in 1943 by Rudolph Kompfner and John Pierce provided a high-power tunable source of microwaves up to 50 GHz and became the most widely used microwave tube (besides the ubiquitous magnetron used in microwave ovens). The gyrotron tube family developed in Russia could produce megawatts of power up into millimeter wave frequencies and is used in industrial heating and plasma research, and to power particle accelerators and nuclear fusion reactors.

Solid state microwave devices

 
Microwave oscillator consisting of a Gunn diode inside a cavity resonator, 1970s
 
Modern radar speed gun. At the right end of the copper horn antenna is the Gunn diode (grey assembly) which generates the microwaves.

The development of semiconductor electronics in the 1950s led to the first solid state microwave devices which worked by a new principle; negative resistance (some of the prewar microwave tubes had also used negative resistance).[27] The feedback oscillator and two-port amplifiers which were used at lower frequencies became unstable at microwave frequencies, and negative resistance oscillators and amplifiers based on one-port devices like diodes worked better.

The tunnel diode invented in 1957 by Japanese physicist Leo Esaki could produce a few milliwatts of microwave power. Its invention set off a search for better negative resistance semiconductor devices for use as microwave oscillators, resulting in the invention of the IMPATT diode in 1956 by W.T. Read and Ralph L. Johnston and the Gunn diode in 1962 by J. B. Gunn.[27] Diodes are the most widely used microwave sources today.

Two low-noise solid state negative resistance microwave amplifiers were developed; the ruby maser invented in 1953 by Charles H. Townes, James P. Gordon, and H. J. Zeiger, and the varactor parametric amplifier developed in 1956 by Marion Hines.[27] These were used for low noise microwave receivers in radio telescopes and satellite ground stations. The maser led to the development of atomic clocks, which keep time using a precise microwave frequency emitted by atoms undergoing an electron transition between two energy levels. Negative resistance amplifier circuits required the invention of new nonreciprocal waveguide components, such as circulators, isolators, and directional couplers. In 1969 Kurokawa derived mathematical conditions for stability in negative resistance circuits which formed the basis of microwave oscillator design.[39]

Microwave integrated circuits

 

Prior to the 1970s microwave devices and circuits were bulky and expensive, so microwave frequencies were generally limited to the output stage of transmitters and the RF front end of receivers, and signals were heterodyned to a lower intermediate frequency for processing. The period from the 1970s to the present has seen the development of tiny inexpensive active solid-state microwave components which can be mounted on circuit boards, allowing circuits to perform significant signal processing at microwave frequencies. This has made possible satellite television, cable television, GPS devices, and modern wireless devices, such as smartphones, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth which connect to networks using microwaves.

Microstrip, a type of transmission line usable at microwave frequencies, was invented with printed circuits in the 1950s.[27] The ability to cheaply fabricate a wide range of shapes on printed circuit boards allowed microstrip versions of capacitors, inductors, resonant stubs, splitters, directional couplers, diplexers, filters and antennas to be made, thus allowing compact microwave circuits to be constructed.[27]

Transistors that operated at microwave frequencies were developed in the 1970s. The semiconductor gallium arsenide (GaAs) has a much higher electron mobility than silicon,[27] so devices fabricated with this material can operate at 4 times the frequency of similar devices of silicon. Beginning in the 1970s GaAs was used to make the first microwave transistors,[27] and it has dominated microwave semiconductors ever since. MESFETs (metal-semiconductor field-effect transistors), fast GaAs field effect transistors using Schottky junctions for the gate, were developed starting in 1968 and have reached cutoff frequencies of 100 GHz, and are now the most widely used active microwave devices.[27] Another family of transistors with a higher frequency limit is the HEMT (high electron mobility transistor), a field effect transistor made with two different semiconductors, AlGaAs and GaAs, using heterojunction technology, and the similar HBT (heterojunction bipolar transistor).[27]

GaAs can be made semi-insulating, allowing it to be used as a substrate on which circuits containing passive components, as well as transistors, can be fabricated by lithography.[27] By 1976 this led to the first integrated circuits (ICs) which functioned at microwave frequencies, called monolithic microwave integrated circuits (MMIC).[27] The word "monolithic" was added to distinguish these from microstrip PCB circuits, which were called "microwave integrated circuits" (MIC). Since then, silicon MMICs have also been developed. Today MMICs have become the workhorses of both analog and digital high-frequency electronics, enabling the production of single-chip microwave receivers, broadband amplifiers, modems, and microprocessors.

See also

References

  1. ^ Hitchcock, R. Timothy (2004). Radio-frequency and Microwave Radiation. American Industrial Hygiene Assn. p. 1. ISBN 978-1931504553.
  2. ^ a b Kumar, Sanjay; Shukla, Saurabh (2014). Concepts and Applications of Microwave Engineering. PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd. p. 3. ISBN 978-8120349353.
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  14. ^ "Welcome to ALMA!". Retrieved 2011-05-25.
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  21. ^ Skolnik, Merrill I. (2001) Introduction to Radar Systems, Third Ed., p. 522, McGraw Hill. 1962 Edition full text
  22. ^ Nave, Rod. "Interaction of Radiation with Matter". HyperPhysics. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  23. ^ Goldsmith, JR (December 1997). "Epidemiologic evidence relevant to radar (microwave) effects". Environmental Health Perspectives. 105 (Suppl. 6): 1579–1587. doi:10.2307/3433674. JSTOR 3433674. PMC 1469943. PMID 9467086.
  24. ^ Andjus, R.K.; Lovelock, J.E. (1955). "Reanimation of rats from body temperatures between 0 and 1 °C by microwave diathermy". The Journal of Physiology. 128 (3): 541–546. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1955.sp005323. PMC 1365902. PMID 13243347.
  25. ^ Lipman, Richard M.; Tripathi, Brenda J.; Tripathi, Ramesh C. (November–December 1988). "Cataracts Induced by Microwave and Ionizing Radiation". Survey of Ophthalmology. 33 (3): 206–207. doi:10.1016/0039-6257(88)90088-4. PMID 3068822.
  26. ^ Hong, Sungook (2001). Wireless: From Marconi's Black-box to the Audion. MIT Press. pp. 5–9, 22. ISBN 978-0262082983.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Roer, T.G. (2012). Microwave Electronic Devices. Springer Science and Business Media. pp. 1–12. ISBN 978-1461525004.
  28. ^ a b c d e Sarkar, T. K.; Mailloux, Robert; Oliner, Arthur A. (2006). History of Wireless. John Wiley and Sons. pp. 474–486. ISBN 978-0471783015.
  29. ^ Emerson, D.T. (February 1998). "The work of Jagdish Chandra Bose: 100 years of MM-wave research". National Radio Astronomy Observatory.
  30. ^ a b Packard, Karle S. (September 1984). "The Origin of Waveguides: A Case of Multiple Rediscovery" (PDF). IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques. MTT-32 (9): 961–969. Bibcode:1984ITMTT..32..961P. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.532.8921. doi:10.1109/tmtt.1984.1132809. Retrieved March 24, 2015.
  31. ^ Strutt, William (Lord Rayleigh) (February 1897). "On the passage of electric waves through tubes, or the vibrations of dielectric cylinders". Philosophical Magazine. 43 (261): 125–132. doi:10.1080/14786449708620969.
  32. ^ Kizer, George (2013). Digital Microwave Communication: Engineering Point-to-Point Microwave Systems. John Wiley and Sons. p. 7. ISBN 978-1118636800.
  33. ^ Lee, Thomas H. (2004). Planar Microwave Engineering: A Practical Guide to Theory, Measurement, and Circuits, Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press. pp. 18, 118. ISBN 978-0521835268.
  34. ^ "Microwaves span the English Channel" (PDF). Short Wave Craft. Vol. 6, no. 5. New York: Popular Book Co. September 1935. pp. 262, 310. Retrieved March 24, 2015.
  35. ^ a b Free, E.E. (August 1931). "Searchlight radio with the new 7 inch waves" (PDF). Radio News. Vol. 8, no. 2. New York: Radio Science Publications. pp. 107–109. Retrieved March 24, 2015.
  36. ^ Ayto, John (2002). 20th century words. p. 269. ISBN 978-7560028743.
  37. ^ Riordan, Michael; Lillian Hoddeson (1988). Crystal fire: the invention of the transistor and the birth of the information age. US: W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 89–92. ISBN 978-0-393-31851-7.
  38. ^ "Cooking with Short Waves" (PDF). Short Wave Craft. 4 (7): 394. November 1933. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  39. ^ Kurokawa, K. (July 1969). "Some Basic Characteristics of Broadband Negative Resistance Oscillator Circuits". Bell System Tech. J. 48 (6): 1937–1955. doi:10.1002/j.1538-7305.1969.tb01158.x. Retrieved December 8, 2012.

External links

  • EM Talk, Microwave Engineering Tutorials and Tools
  • Millimeter Wave and Microwave Waveguide dimension chart.

microwave, this, article, about, electromagnetic, wave, cooking, appliance, oven, other, uses, disambiguation, form, electromagnetic, radiation, with, wavelengths, ranging, from, about, meter, millimeter, corresponding, frequencies, between, respectively, diff. This article is about the electromagnetic wave For the cooking appliance see Microwave oven For other uses see Microwaves disambiguation Microwave is a form of electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths ranging from about one meter to one millimeter corresponding to frequencies between 300 MHz and 300 GHz respectively 1 2 3 4 5 Different sources define different frequency ranges as microwaves the above broad definition includes UHF SHF and EHF millimeter wave bands A more common definition in radio frequency engineering is the range between 1 and 100 GHz wavelengths between 0 3 m and 3 mm 2 In all cases microwaves include the entire SHF band 3 to 30 GHz or 10 to 1 cm at minimum Frequencies in the microwave range are often referred to by their IEEE radar band designations S C X Ku K or Ka band or by similar NATO or EU designations A telecommunications tower with a variety of dish antennas for microwave relay links on Frazier Peak Ventura County California The apertures of the dishes are covered by plastic sheets radomes to keep out moisture The prefix micro in microwave is not meant to suggest a wavelength in the micrometer range Rather it indicates that microwaves are small having shorter wavelengths compared to the radio waves used prior to microwave technology The boundaries between far infrared terahertz radiation microwaves and ultra high frequency radio waves are fairly arbitrary and are used variously between different fields of study Microwaves travel by line of sight unlike lower frequency radio waves they do not diffract around hills follow the earth s surface as ground waves or reflect from the ionosphere so terrestrial microwave communication links are limited by the visual horizon to about 40 miles 64 km At the high end of the band they are absorbed by gases in the atmosphere limiting practical communication distances to around a kilometer Microwaves are widely used in modern technology for example in point to point communication links wireless networks microwave radio relay networks radar satellite and spacecraft communication medical diathermy and cancer treatment remote sensing radio astronomy particle accelerators spectroscopy industrial heating collision avoidance systems garage door openers and keyless entry systems and for cooking food in microwave ovens Contents 1 Electromagnetic spectrum 2 Propagation 2 1 Troposcatter 3 Antennas 4 Design and analysis 5 Microwave sources 6 Microwave uses 6 1 Communication 6 2 Navigation 6 3 Radar 6 4 Radio astronomy 6 5 Heating and power application 6 6 Spectroscopy 7 Microwave frequency bands 8 Microwave frequency measurement 9 Effects on health 10 History 10 1 Hertzian optics 10 2 First microwave communication experiments 10 3 Radar 10 4 Post World War II 10 5 Solid state microwave devices 10 6 Microwave integrated circuits 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksElectromagnetic spectrum EditMicrowaves occupy a place in the electromagnetic spectrum with frequency above ordinary radio waves and below infrared light Electromagnetic spectrumName Wavelength Frequency Hz Photon energy eV Gamma ray lt 0 01 nm gt 30 EHz gt 124 keVX ray 0 01 nm 10 nm 30 EHz 30 PHz 124 keV 124 eVUltraviolet 10 nm 400 nm 30 PHz 750 THz 124 eV 3 eVVisible light 400 nm 750 nm 750 THz 400 THz 3 eV 1 7 eVInfrared 750 nm 1 mm 400 THz 300 GHz 1 7 eV 1 24 meVMicrowave 1 mm 1 m 300 GHz 300 MHz 1 24 meV 1 24 µeVRadio 1 m 300 MHz 1 24 µeVIn descriptions of the electromagnetic spectrum some sources classify microwaves as radio waves a subset of the radio wave band while others classify microwaves and radio waves as distinct types of radiation This is an arbitrary distinction Propagation EditMain article Radio propagation The atmospheric attenuation of microwaves and far infrared radiation in dry air with a precipitable water vapor level of 0 001 mm The downward spikes in the graph correspond to frequencies at which microwaves are absorbed more strongly This graph includes a range of frequencies from 0 to 1 THz the microwaves are the subset in the range between 0 3 and 300 gigahertz Microwaves travel solely by line of sight paths unlike lower frequency radio waves they do not travel as ground waves which follow the contour of the Earth or reflect off the ionosphere skywaves 6 Although at the low end of the band they can pass through building walls enough for useful reception usually rights of way cleared to the first Fresnel zone are required Therefore on the surface of the Earth microwave communication links are limited by the visual horizon to about 30 40 miles 48 64 km Microwaves are absorbed by moisture in the atmosphere and the attenuation increases with frequency becoming a significant factor rain fade at the high end of the band Beginning at about 40 GHz atmospheric gases also begin to absorb microwaves so above this frequency microwave transmission is limited to a few kilometers A spectral band structure causes absorption peaks at specific frequencies see graph at right Above 100 GHz the absorption of electromagnetic radiation by Earth s atmosphere is so great that it is in effect opaque until the atmosphere becomes transparent again in the so called infrared and optical window frequency ranges Troposcatter Edit Main article Tropospheric scatter In a microwave beam directed at an angle into the sky a small amount of the power will be randomly scattered as the beam passes through the troposphere 6 A sensitive receiver beyond the horizon with a high gain antenna focused on that area of the troposphere can pick up the signal This technique has been used at frequencies between 0 45 and 5 GHz in tropospheric scatter troposcatter communication systems to communicate beyond the horizon at distances up to 300 km Antennas Edit Waveguide is used to carry microwaves Example of waveguides and a diplexer in an air traffic control radar The short wavelengths of microwaves allow omnidirectional antennas for portable devices to be made very small from 1 to 20 centimeters long so microwave frequencies are widely used for wireless devices such as cell phones cordless phones and wireless LANs Wi Fi access for laptops and Bluetooth earphones Antennas used include short whip antennas rubber ducky antennas sleeve dipoles patch antennas and increasingly the printed circuit inverted F antenna PIFA used in cell phones Their short wavelength also allows narrow beams of microwaves to be produced by conveniently small high gain antennas from a half meter to 5 meters in diameter Therefore beams of microwaves are used for point to point communication links and for radar An advantage of narrow beams is that they do not interfere with nearby equipment using the same frequency allowing frequency reuse by nearby transmitters Parabolic dish antennas are the most widely used directive antennas at microwave frequencies but horn antennas slot antennas and lens antennas are also used Flat microstrip antennas are being increasingly used in consumer devices Another directive antenna practical at microwave frequencies is the phased array a computer controlled array of antennas that produces a beam that can be electronically steered in different directions At microwave frequencies the transmission lines which are used to carry lower frequency radio waves to and from antennas such as coaxial cable and parallel wire lines have excessive power losses so when low attenuation is required microwaves are carried by metal pipes called waveguides Due to the high cost and maintenance requirements of waveguide runs in many microwave antennas the output stage of the transmitter or the RF front end of the receiver is located at the antenna Design and analysis EditThe term microwave also has a more technical meaning in electromagnetics and circuit theory 7 8 Apparatus and techniques may be described qualitatively as microwave when the wavelengths of signals are roughly the same as the dimensions of the circuit so that lumped element circuit theory is inaccurate and instead distributed circuit elements and transmission line theory are more useful methods for design and analysis As a consequence practical microwave circuits tend to move away from the discrete resistors capacitors and inductors used with lower frequency radio waves Open wire and coaxial transmission lines used at lower frequencies are replaced by waveguides and stripline and lumped element tuned circuits are replaced by cavity resonators or resonant stubs 7 In turn at even higher frequencies where the wavelength of the electromagnetic waves becomes small in comparison to the size of the structures used to process them microwave techniques become inadequate and the methods of optics are used Microwave sources Edit Cutaway view inside a cavity magnetron as used in a microwave oven left Antenna splitter microstrip techniques become increasingly necessary at higher frequencies right Disassembled radar speed gun The grey assembly attached to the end of the copper colored horn antenna is the Gunn diode which generates the microwaves High power microwave sources use specialized vacuum tubes to generate microwaves These devices operate on different principles from low frequency vacuum tubes using the ballistic motion of electrons in a vacuum under the influence of controlling electric or magnetic fields and include the magnetron used in microwave ovens klystron traveling wave tube TWT and gyrotron These devices work in the density modulated mode rather than the current modulated mode This means that they work on the basis of clumps of electrons flying ballistically through them rather than using a continuous stream of electrons Low power microwave sources use solid state devices such as the field effect transistor at least at lower frequencies tunnel diodes Gunn diodes and IMPATT diodes 9 Low power sources are available as benchtop instruments rackmount instruments embeddable modules and in card level formats A maser is a solid state device which amplifies microwaves using similar principles to the laser which amplifies higher frequency light waves All warm objects emit low level microwave black body radiation depending on their temperature so in meteorology and remote sensing microwave radiometers are used to measure the temperature of objects or terrain 10 The sun 11 and other astronomical radio sources such as Cassiopeia A emit low level microwave radiation which carries information about their makeup which is studied by radio astronomers using receivers called radio telescopes 10 The cosmic microwave background radiation CMBR for example is a weak microwave noise filling empty space which is a major source of information on cosmology s Big Bang theory of the origin of the Universe Microwave uses EditMicrowave technology is extensively used for point to point telecommunications i e non broadcast uses Microwaves are especially suitable for this use since they are more easily focused into narrower beams than radio waves allowing frequency reuse their comparatively higher frequencies allow broad bandwidth and high data transmission rates and antenna sizes are smaller than at lower frequencies because antenna size is inversely proportional to the transmitted frequency Microwaves are used in spacecraft communication and much of the world s data TV and telephone communications are transmitted long distances by microwaves between ground stations and communications satellites Microwaves are also employed in microwave ovens and in radar technology Communication Edit A satellite dish on a residence which receives satellite television over a Ku band 12 14 GHz microwave beam from a direct broadcast communications satellite in a geostationary orbit 35 700 kilometres 22 000 miles above the Earth Main articles Point to point telecommunications Microwave transmission and Satellite communications Before the advent of fiber optic transmission most long distance telephone calls were carried via networks of microwave radio relay links run by carriers such as AT amp T Long Lines Starting in the early 1950s frequency division multiplexing was used to send up to 5 400 telephone channels on each microwave radio channel with as many as ten radio channels combined into one antenna for the hop to the next site up to 70 km away Wireless LAN protocols such as Bluetooth and the IEEE 802 11 specifications used for Wi Fi also use microwaves in the 2 4 GHz ISM band although 802 11a uses ISM band and U NII frequencies in the 5 GHz range Licensed long range up to about 25 km Wireless Internet Access services have been used for almost a decade in many countries in the 3 5 4 0 GHz range The FCC recently when carved out spectrum for carriers that wish to offer services in this range in the U S with emphasis on 3 65 GHz Dozens of service providers across the country are securing or have already received licenses from the FCC to operate in this band The WIMAX service offerings that can be carried on the 3 65 GHz band will give business customers another option for connectivity Metropolitan area network MAN protocols such as WiMAX Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access are based on standards such as IEEE 802 16 designed to operate between 2 and 11 GHz Commercial implementations are in the 2 3 GHz 2 5 GHz 3 5 GHz and 5 8 GHz ranges Mobile Broadband Wireless Access MBWA protocols based on standards specifications such as IEEE 802 20 or ATIS ANSI HC SDMA such as iBurst operate between 1 6 and 2 3 GHz to give mobility and in building penetration characteristics similar to mobile phones but with vastly greater spectral efficiency 12 Some mobile phone networks like GSM use the low microwave high UHF frequencies around 1 8 and 1 9 GHz in the Americas and elsewhere respectively DVB SH and S DMB use 1 452 to 1 492 GHz while proprietary incompatible satellite radio in the U S uses around 2 3 GHz for DARS Microwave radio is used in broadcasting and telecommunication transmissions because due to their short wavelength highly directional antennas are smaller and therefore more practical than they would be at longer wavelengths lower frequencies There is also more bandwidth in the microwave spectrum than in the rest of the radio spectrum the usable bandwidth below 300 MHz is less than 300 MHz while many GHz can be used above 300 MHz Typically microwaves are used in television news to transmit a signal from a remote location to a television station from a specially equipped van See broadcast auxiliary service BAS remote pickup unit RPU and studio transmitter link STL Most satellite communications systems operate in the C X Ka or Ku bands of the microwave spectrum These frequencies allow large bandwidth while avoiding the crowded UHF frequencies and staying below the atmospheric absorption of EHF frequencies Satellite TV either operates in the C band for the traditional large dish fixed satellite service or Ku band for direct broadcast satellite Military communications run primarily over X or Ku band links with Ka band being used for Milstar Navigation Edit Further information Satellite navigation and Navigation Global Navigation Satellite Systems GNSS including the Chinese Beidou the American Global Positioning System introduced in 1978 and the Russian GLONASS broadcast navigational signals in various bands between about 1 2 GHz and 1 6 GHz Radar Edit The parabolic antenna lower curved surface of an ASR 9 airport surveillance radar which radiates a narrow vertical fan shaped beam of 2 7 2 9 GHz S band microwaves to locate aircraft in the airspace surrounding an airport Main article Radar Radar is a radiolocation technique in which a beam of radio waves emitted by a transmitter bounces off an object and returns to a receiver allowing the location range speed and other characteristics of the object to be determined The short wavelength of microwaves causes large reflections from objects the size of motor vehicles ships and aircraft Also at these wavelengths the high gain antennas such as parabolic antennas which are required to produce the narrow beamwidths needed to accurately locate objects are conveniently small allowing them to be rapidly turned to scan for objects Therefore microwave frequencies are the main frequencies used in radar Microwave radar is widely used for applications such as air traffic control weather forecasting navigation of ships and speed limit enforcement Long distance radars use the lower microwave frequencies since at the upper end of the band atmospheric absorption limits the range but millimeter waves are used for short range radar such as collision avoidance systems Some of the dish antennas of the Atacama Large Millimeter Array ALMA a radio telescope located in northern Chile It receives microwaves in the millimeter wave range 31 1000 GHz Maps of the cosmic microwave background radiation CMBR showing the improved resolution which has been achieved with better microwave radio telescopes Radio astronomy Edit Main article radio astronomy Microwaves emitted by astronomical radio sources planets stars galaxies and nebulas are studied in radio astronomy with large dish antennas called radio telescopes In addition to receiving naturally occurring microwave radiation radio telescopes have been used in active radar experiments to bounce microwaves off planets in the solar system to determine the distance to the Moon or map the invisible surface of Venus through cloud cover A recently completed microwave radio telescope is the Atacama Large Millimeter Array located at more than 5 000 meters 16 597 ft altitude in Chile which observes the universe in the millimeter and submillimeter wavelength ranges The world s largest ground based astronomy project to date it consists of more than 66 dishes and was built in an international collaboration by Europe North America East Asia and Chile 13 14 A major recent focus of microwave radio astronomy has been mapping the cosmic microwave background radiation CMBR discovered in 1964 by radio astronomers Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson This faint background radiation which fills the universe and is almost the same in all directions is relic radiation from the Big Bang and is one of the few sources of information about conditions in the early universe Due to the expansion and thus cooling of the Universe the originally high energy radiation has been shifted into the microwave region of the radio spectrum Sufficiently sensitive radio telescopes can detect the CMBR as a faint signal that is not associated with any star galaxy or other object 15 Heating and power application Edit Small microwave oven on a kitchen counter Microwaves are widely used for heating in industrial processes A microwave tunnel oven for softening plastic rods prior to extrusion A microwave oven passes microwave radiation at a frequency near 2 45 GHz 12 cm through food causing dielectric heating primarily by absorption of the energy in water Microwave ovens became common kitchen appliances in Western countries in the late 1970s following the development of less expensive cavity magnetrons Water in the liquid state possesses many molecular interactions that broaden the absorption peak In the vapor phase isolated water molecules absorb at around 22 GHz almost ten times the frequency of the microwave oven Microwave heating is used in industrial processes for drying and curing products Many semiconductor processing techniques use microwaves to generate plasma for such purposes as reactive ion etching and plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition PECVD Microwaves are used in stellarators and tokamak experimental fusion reactors to help break down the gas into a plasma and heat it to very high temperatures The frequency is tuned to the cyclotron resonance of the electrons in the magnetic field anywhere between 2 200 GHz hence it is often referred to as Electron Cyclotron Resonance Heating ECRH The upcoming ITER thermonuclear reactor 16 will use up to 20 MW of 170 GHz microwaves Microwaves can be used to transmit power over long distances and post World War 2 research was done to examine possibilities NASA worked in the 1970s and early 1980s to research the possibilities of using solar power satellite SPS systems with large solar arrays that would beam power down to the Earth s surface via microwaves Less than lethal weaponry exists that uses millimeter waves to heat a thin layer of human skin to an intolerable temperature so as to make the targeted person move away A two second burst of the 95 GHz focused beam heats the skin to a temperature of 54 C 129 F at a depth of 0 4 millimetres 1 64 in The United States Air Force and Marines are currently using this type of active denial system in fixed installations 17 Spectroscopy Edit Microwave radiation is used in electron paramagnetic resonance EPR or ESR spectroscopy typically in the X band region 9 GHz in conjunction typically with magnetic fields of 0 3 T This technique provides information on unpaired electrons in chemical systems such as free radicals or transition metal ions such as Cu II Microwave radiation is also used to perform rotational spectroscopy and can be combined with electrochemistry as in microwave enhanced electrochemistry Microwave frequency bands EditBands of frequencies in the microwave spectrum are designated by letters Unfortunately there are several incompatible band designation systems and even within a system the frequency ranges corresponding to some of the letters vary somewhat between different application fields 18 19 The letter system had its origin in World War 2 in a top secret U S classification of bands used in radar sets this is the origin of the oldest letter system the IEEE radar bands One set of microwave frequency bands designations by the Radio Society of Great Britain RSGB is tabulated below Microwave frequency bands Designation Frequency range Wavelength range Typical usesL band 1 to 2 GHz 15 cm to 30 cm military telemetry GPS mobile phones GSM amateur radioS band 2 to 4 GHz 7 5 cm to 15 cm weather radar surface ship radar some communications satellites microwave ovens microwave devices communications radio astronomy mobile phones wireless LAN Bluetooth ZigBee GPS amateur radioC band 4 to 8 GHz 3 75 cm to 7 5 cm long distance radio telecommunicationsX band 8 to 12 GHz 25 mm to 37 5 mm satellite communications radar terrestrial broadband space communications amateur radio molecular rotational spectroscopyKu band 12 to 18 GHz 16 7 mm to 25 mm satellite communications molecular rotational spectroscopyK band 18 to 26 5 GHz 11 3 mm to 16 7 mm radar satellite communications astronomical observations automotive radar molecular rotational spectroscopyKa band 26 5 to 40 GHz 5 0 mm to 11 3 mm satellite communications molecular rotational spectroscopyQ band 33 to 50 GHz 6 0 mm to 9 0 mm satellite communications terrestrial microwave communications radio astronomy automotive radar molecular rotational spectroscopyU band 40 to 60 GHz 5 0 mm to 7 5 mmV band 50 to 75 GHz 4 0 mm to 6 0 mm millimeter wave radar research molecular rotational spectroscopy and other kinds of scientific researchW band 75 to 110 GHz 2 7 mm to 4 0 mm satellite communications millimeter wave radar research military radar targeting and tracking applications and some non military applications automotive radarF band 90 to 140 GHz 2 1 mm to 3 3 mm SHF transmissions Radio astronomy microwave devices communications wireless LAN most modern radars communications satellites satellite television broadcasting DBS amateur radioD band 110 to 170 GHz 1 8 mm to 2 7 mm EHF transmissions Radio astronomy high frequency microwave radio relay microwave remote sensing amateur radio directed energy weapon millimeter wave scannerOther definitions exist 20 The term P band is sometimes used for UHF frequencies below the L band but is now obsolete per IEEE Std 521 When radars were first developed at K band during World War 2 it was not known that there was a nearby absorption band due to water vapor and oxygen in the atmosphere To avoid this problem the original K band was split into a lower band Ku and upper band Ka 21 Microwave frequency measurement Edit Absorption wavemeter for measuring in the Ku band Microwave frequency can be measured by either electronic or mechanical techniques Frequency counters or high frequency heterodyne systems can be used Here the unknown frequency is compared with harmonics of a known lower frequency by use of a low frequency generator a harmonic generator and a mixer The accuracy of the measurement is limited by the accuracy and stability of the reference source Mechanical methods require a tunable resonator such as an absorption wavemeter which has a known relation between a physical dimension and frequency In a laboratory setting Lecher lines can be used to directly measure the wavelength on a transmission line made of parallel wires the frequency can then be calculated A similar technique is to use a slotted waveguide or slotted coaxial line to directly measure the wavelength These devices consist of a probe introduced into the line through a longitudinal slot so that the probe is free to travel up and down the line Slotted lines are primarily intended for measurement of the voltage standing wave ratio on the line However provided a standing wave is present they may also be used to measure the distance between the nodes which is equal to half the wavelength The precision of this method is limited by the determination of the nodal locations Effects on health EditFurther information Electromagnetic radiation and health and Microwave burn Microwaves are non ionizing radiation which means that microwave photons do not contain sufficient energy to ionize molecules or break chemical bonds or cause DNA damage as ionizing radiation such as x rays or ultraviolet can 22 The word radiation refers to energy radiating from a source and not to radioactivity The main effect of absorption of microwaves is to heat materials the electromagnetic fields cause polar molecules to vibrate It has not been shown conclusively that microwaves or other non ionizing electromagnetic radiation have significant adverse biological effects at low levels Some but not all studies suggest that long term exposure may have a carcinogenic effect 23 During World War II it was observed that individuals in the radiation path of radar installations experienced clicks and buzzing sounds in response to microwave radiation Research by NASA in the 1970s has shown this to be caused by thermal expansion in parts of the inner ear In 1955 Dr James Lovelock was able to reanimate rats chilled to 0 and 1 C 32 and 34 F using microwave diathermy 24 When injury from exposure to microwaves occurs it usually results from dielectric heating induced in the body The lens and cornea of the eye are especially vulnerable because they contain no blood vessels that can carry away heat Exposure to microwave radiation can produce cataracts by this mechanism because the microwave heating denatures proteins in the crystalline lens of the eye 25 in the same way that heat turns egg whites white and opaque Exposure to heavy doses of microwave radiation as from an oven that has been tampered with to allow operation even with the door open can produce heat damage in other tissues as well up to and including serious burns that may not be immediately evident because of the tendency for microwaves to heat deeper tissues with higher moisture content History EditHertzian optics Edit Microwaves were first generated in the 1890s in some of the earliest radio experiments by physicists who thought of them as a form of invisible light 26 James Clerk Maxwell in his 1873 theory of electromagnetism now called Maxwell s equations had predicted that a coupled electric field and magnetic field could travel through space as an electromagnetic wave and proposed that light consisted of electromagnetic waves of short wavelength In 1888 German physicist Heinrich Hertz was the first to demonstrate the existence of electromagnetic waves generating radio waves using a primitive spark gap radio transmitter 27 Hertz and the other early radio researchers were interested in exploring the similarities between radio waves and light waves to test Maxwell s theory They concentrated on producing short wavelength radio waves in the UHF and microwave ranges with which they could duplicate classic optics experiments in their laboratories using quasioptical components such as prisms and lenses made of paraffin sulfur and pitch and wire diffraction gratings to refract and diffract radio waves like light rays 28 Hertz produced waves up to 450 MHz his directional 450 MHz transmitter consisted of a 26 cm brass rod dipole antenna with a spark gap between the ends suspended at the focal line of a parabolic antenna made of a curved zinc sheet powered by high voltage pulses from an induction coil 27 His historic experiments demonstrated that radio waves like light exhibited refraction diffraction polarization interference and standing waves 28 proving that radio waves and light waves were both forms of Maxwell s electromagnetic waves Heinrich Hertz s 450 MHz spark transmitter 1888 consisting of 23 cm dipole and spark gap at focus of parabolic reflector Jagadish Chandra Bose in 1894 was the first person to produce millimeter waves his spark oscillator in box right generated 60 GHz 5 mm waves using 3 mm metal ball resonators Microwave spectroscopy experiment by John Ambrose Fleming in 1897 showing refraction of 1 4 GHz microwaves by paraffin prism duplicating earlier experiments by Bose and Righi Augusto Righi s 12 GHz spark oscillator and receiver 1895 1 2 GHz microwave spark transmitter left and coherer receiver right used by Guglielmo Marconi during his 1895 experiments had a range of 6 5 km 4 0 mi Beginning in 1894 Indian physicist Jagadish Chandra Bose performed the first experiments with microwaves He was the first person to produce millimeter waves generating frequencies up to 60 GHz 5 millimeter using a 3 mm metal ball spark oscillator 29 28 Bose also invented waveguide horn antennas and semiconductor crystal detectors for use in his experiments Independently in 1894 Oliver Lodge and Augusto Righi experimented with 1 5 and 12 GHz microwaves respectively generated by small metal ball spark resonators 28 Russian physicist Pyotr Lebedev in 1895 generated 50 GHz millimeter waves 28 In 1897 Lord Rayleigh solved the mathematical boundary value problem of electromagnetic waves propagating through conducting tubes and dielectric rods of arbitrary shape 30 31 32 33 which gave the modes and cutoff frequency of microwaves propagating through a waveguide 27 However since microwaves were limited to line of sight paths they could not communicate beyond the visual horizon and the low power of the spark transmitters then in use limited their practical range to a few miles The subsequent development of radio communication after 1896 employed lower frequencies which could travel beyond the horizon as ground waves and by reflecting off the ionosphere as skywaves and microwave frequencies were not further explored at this time First microwave communication experiments Edit Practical use of microwave frequencies did not occur until the 1940s and 1950s due to a lack of adequate sources since the triode vacuum tube valve electronic oscillator used in radio transmitters could not produce frequencies above a few hundred megahertz due to excessive electron transit time and interelectrode capacitance 27 By the 1930s the first low power microwave vacuum tubes had been developed using new principles the Barkhausen Kurz tube and the split anode magnetron 27 These could generate a few watts of power at frequencies up to a few gigahertz and were used in the first experiments in communication with microwaves Antennas of 1931 experimental 1 7 GHz microwave relay link across the English Channel Experimental 700 MHz transmitter 1932 at Westinghouse labs transmits voice over a mile Southworth at left demonstrating waveguide at IRE meeting in 1938 showing 1 5 GHz microwaves passing through the 7 5 m flexible metal hose registering on a diode detector The first modern horn antenna in 1938 with inventor Wilmer L BarrowIn 1931 an Anglo French consortium headed by Andre C Clavier demonstrated the first experimental microwave relay link across the English Channel 40 miles 64 km between Dover UK and Calais France 34 35 The system transmitted telephony telegraph and facsimile data over bidirectional 1 7 GHz beams with a power of one half watt produced by miniature Barkhausen Kurz tubes at the focus of 10 foot 3 m metal dishes A word was needed to distinguish these new shorter wavelengths which had previously been lumped into the short wave band which meant all waves shorter than 200 meters The terms quasi optical waves and ultrashort waves were used briefly but did not catch on The first usage of the word micro wave apparently occurred in 1931 35 36 Radar Edit The development of radar mainly in secrecy before and during World War II resulted in the technological advances which made microwaves practical 27 Wavelengths in the centimeter range were required to give the small radar antennas which were compact enough to fit on aircraft a narrow enough beamwidth to localize enemy aircraft It was found that conventional transmission lines used to carry radio waves had excessive power losses at microwave frequencies and George Southworth at Bell Labs and Wilmer Barrow at MIT independently invented waveguide in 1936 30 Barrow invented the horn antenna in 1938 as a means to efficiently radiate microwaves into or out of a waveguide In a microwave receiver a nonlinear component was needed that would act as a detector and mixer at these frequencies as vacuum tubes had too much capacitance To fill this need researchers resurrected an obsolete technology the point contact crystal detector cat whisker detector which was used as a demodulator in crystal radios around the turn of the century before vacuum tube receivers 27 37 The low capacitance of semiconductor junctions allowed them to function at microwave frequencies The first modern silicon and germanium diodes were developed as microwave detectors in the 1930s and the principles of semiconductor physics learned during their development led to semiconductor electronics after the war 27 Randall and Boot s prototype cavity magnetron tube at the University of Birmingham 1940 In use the tube was installed between the poles of an electromagnet First commercial klystron tube by General Electric 1940 sectioned to show internal construction British Mk VIII the first microwave air intercept radar in nose of British fighter Microwave radar powered by the new magnetron tube significantly shortened World War II Mobile US Army microwave relay station 1945 demonstrating relay systems using frequencies from 100 MHz to 4 9 GHz which could transmit up to 8 phone calls on a beam The first powerful sources of microwaves were invented at the beginning of World War II the klystron tube by Russell and Sigurd Varian at Stanford University in 1937 and the cavity magnetron tube by John Randall and Harry Boot at Birmingham University UK in 1940 27 Ten centimeter 3 GHz microwave radar was in use on British warplanes in late 1941 and proved to be a game changer Britain s 1940 decision to share its microwave technology with its US ally the Tizard Mission significantly shortened the war The MIT Radiation Laboratory established secretly at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1940 to research radar produced much of the theoretical knowledge necessary to use microwaves The first microwave relay systems were developed by the Allied military near the end of the war and used for secure battlefield communication networks in the European theater Post World War II Edit After World War II microwaves were rapidly exploited commercially 27 Due to their high frequency they had a very large information carrying capacity bandwidth a single microwave beam could carry tens of thousands of phone calls In the 1950s and 60s transcontinental microwave relay networks were built in the US and Europe to exchange telephone calls between cities and distribute television programs In the new television broadcasting industry from the 1940s microwave dishes were used to transmit backhaul video feeds from mobile production trucks back to the studio allowing the first remote TV broadcasts The first communications satellites were launched in the 1960s which relayed telephone calls and television between widely separated points on Earth using microwave beams In 1964 Arno Penzias and Robert Woodrow Wilson while investigating noise in a satellite horn antenna at Bell Labs Holmdel New Jersey discovered cosmic microwave background radiation C band horn antennas at a telephone switching center in Seattle belonging to AT amp T s Long Lines microwave relay network built in the 1960s Microwave lens antenna used in the radar for the 1954 Nike Ajax anti aircraft missile The first commercial microwave oven Amana s Radarange installed in the kitchen of US merchant ship NS Savannah in 1961 Microwave radar became the central technology used in air traffic control maritime navigation anti aircraft defense ballistic missile detection and later many other uses Radar and satellite communication motivated the development of modern microwave antennas the parabolic antenna the most common type cassegrain antenna lens antenna slot antenna and phased array The ability of short waves to quickly heat materials and cook food had been investigated in the 1930s by I F Mouromtseff at Westinghouse and at the 1933 Chicago World s Fair demonstrated cooking meals with a 60 MHz radio transmitter 38 In 1945 Percy Spencer an engineer working on radar at Raytheon noticed that microwave radiation from a magnetron oscillator melted a candy bar in his pocket He investigated cooking with microwaves and invented the microwave oven consisting of a magnetron feeding microwaves into a closed metal cavity containing food which was patented by Raytheon on 8 October 1945 Due to their expense microwave ovens were initially used in institutional kitchens but by 1986 roughly 25 of households in the U S owned one Microwave heating became widely used as an industrial process in industries such as plastics fabrication and as a medical therapy to kill cancer cells in microwave hyperthermy The traveling wave tube TWT developed in 1943 by Rudolph Kompfner and John Pierce provided a high power tunable source of microwaves up to 50 GHz and became the most widely used microwave tube besides the ubiquitous magnetron used in microwave ovens The gyrotron tube family developed in Russia could produce megawatts of power up into millimeter wave frequencies and is used in industrial heating and plasma research and to power particle accelerators and nuclear fusion reactors Solid state microwave devices Edit Microwave oscillator consisting of a Gunn diode inside a cavity resonator 1970s Modern radar speed gun At the right end of the copper horn antenna is the Gunn diode grey assembly which generates the microwaves The development of semiconductor electronics in the 1950s led to the first solid state microwave devices which worked by a new principle negative resistance some of the prewar microwave tubes had also used negative resistance 27 The feedback oscillator and two port amplifiers which were used at lower frequencies became unstable at microwave frequencies and negative resistance oscillators and amplifiers based on one port devices like diodes worked better The tunnel diode invented in 1957 by Japanese physicist Leo Esaki could produce a few milliwatts of microwave power Its invention set off a search for better negative resistance semiconductor devices for use as microwave oscillators resulting in the invention of the IMPATT diode in 1956 by W T Read and Ralph L Johnston and the Gunn diode in 1962 by J B Gunn 27 Diodes are the most widely used microwave sources today Two low noise solid state negative resistance microwave amplifiers were developed the ruby maser invented in 1953 by Charles H Townes James P Gordon and H J Zeiger and the varactor parametric amplifier developed in 1956 by Marion Hines 27 These were used for low noise microwave receivers in radio telescopes and satellite ground stations The maser led to the development of atomic clocks which keep time using a precise microwave frequency emitted by atoms undergoing an electron transition between two energy levels Negative resistance amplifier circuits required the invention of new nonreciprocal waveguide components such as circulators isolators and directional couplers In 1969 Kurokawa derived mathematical conditions for stability in negative resistance circuits which formed the basis of microwave oscillator design 39 Microwave integrated circuits Edit ku band microstrip circuit used in satellite television dish Prior to the 1970s microwave devices and circuits were bulky and expensive so microwave frequencies were generally limited to the output stage of transmitters and the RF front end of receivers and signals were heterodyned to a lower intermediate frequency for processing The period from the 1970s to the present has seen the development of tiny inexpensive active solid state microwave components which can be mounted on circuit boards allowing circuits to perform significant signal processing at microwave frequencies This has made possible satellite television cable television GPS devices and modern wireless devices such as smartphones Wi Fi and Bluetooth which connect to networks using microwaves Microstrip a type of transmission line usable at microwave frequencies was invented with printed circuits in the 1950s 27 The ability to cheaply fabricate a wide range of shapes on printed circuit boards allowed microstrip versions of capacitors inductors resonant stubs splitters directional couplers diplexers filters and antennas to be made thus allowing compact microwave circuits to be constructed 27 Transistors that operated at microwave frequencies were developed in the 1970s The semiconductor gallium arsenide GaAs has a much higher electron mobility than silicon 27 so devices fabricated with this material can operate at 4 times the frequency of similar devices of silicon Beginning in the 1970s GaAs was used to make the first microwave transistors 27 and it has dominated microwave semiconductors ever since MESFETs metal semiconductor field effect transistors fast GaAs field effect transistors using Schottky junctions for the gate were developed starting in 1968 and have reached cutoff frequencies of 100 GHz and are now the most widely used active microwave devices 27 Another family of transistors with a higher frequency limit is the HEMT high electron mobility transistor a field effect transistor made with two different semiconductors AlGaAs and GaAs using heterojunction technology and the similar HBT heterojunction bipolar transistor 27 GaAs can be made semi insulating allowing it to be used as a substrate on which circuits containing passive components as well as transistors can be fabricated by lithography 27 By 1976 this led to the first integrated circuits ICs which functioned at microwave frequencies called monolithic microwave integrated circuits MMIC 27 The word monolithic was added to distinguish these from microstrip PCB circuits which were called microwave integrated circuits MIC Since then silicon MMICs have also been developed Today MMICs have become the workhorses of both analog and digital high frequency electronics enabling the production of single chip microwave receivers broadband amplifiers modems and microprocessors See also Edit Electronics portal Telecommunication portalBlock upconverter BUC Cosmic microwave background Electron cyclotron resonance International Microwave Power Institute Low noise block converter LNB Maser Microwave auditory effect Microwave cavity Microwave chemistry Microwave radio relay Microwave transmission Rain fade RF switch matrix The Thing listening device References Edit Hitchcock R Timothy 2004 Radio frequency and Microwave Radiation American Industrial Hygiene Assn p 1 ISBN 978 1931504553 a b Kumar Sanjay Shukla Saurabh 2014 Concepts and Applications of Microwave Engineering PHI Learning Pvt Ltd p 3 ISBN 978 8120349353 Jones Graham A Layer David H Osenkowsky Thomas G 2013 National Association of Broadcasters Engineering Handbook 10th Ed Taylor amp Francis p 6 ISBN 978 1136034107 Pozar David M 1993 Microwave Engineering Addison Wesley Publishing Company ISBN 0 201 50418 9 Sorrentino R and Bianchi Giovanni 2010 Microwave and RF Engineering John Wiley amp Sons p 4 ISBN 047066021X a b Seybold John S 2005 Introduction to RF Propagation John Wiley and Sons pp 55 58 ISBN 978 0471743682 a b Golio Mike Golio Janet 2007 RF and Microwave Passive and Active Technologies CRC Press pp I 2 I 4 ISBN 978 1420006728 Karmel Paul R Colef Gabriel D Camisa Raymond L 1998 Introduction to Electromagnetic and Microwave Engineering John Wiley and Sons p 1 ISBN 9780471177814 Microwave Oscillator Archived 2013 10 30 at the Wayback Machine notes by Herley General Microwave a b Sisodia M L 2007 Microwaves Introduction To Circuits Devices And Antennas New Age International pp 1 4 1 7 ISBN 978 8122413380 Liou Kuo Nan 2002 An introduction to atmospheric radiation Academic Press p 2 ISBN 978 0 12 451451 5 Retrieved 12 July 2010 IEEE 802 20 Mobile Broadband Wireless Access MBWA Official web site Retrieved August 20 2011 ALMA website Retrieved 2011 09 21 Welcome to ALMA Retrieved 2011 05 25 Wright E L 2004 Theoretical Overview of Cosmic Microwave Background Anisotropy In W L Freedman ed Measuring and Modeling the Universe Carnegie Observatories Astrophysics Series Cambridge University Press p 291 arXiv astro ph 0305591 Bibcode 2004mmu symp 291W ISBN 978 0 521 75576 4 The way to new energy ITER 2011 11 04 Retrieved 2011 11 08 Silent Guardian Protection System Less than Lethal Directed Energy Protection raytheon com Frequency Letter bands Microwave Encyclopedia Microwaves101 website Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers IEEE 14 May 2016 Retrieved 1 July 2018 Golio Mike Golio Janet 2007 RF and Microwave Applications and Systems CRC Press pp 1 9 1 11 ISBN 978 1420006711 See eEngineer Radio Frequency Band Designations Radioing com Retrieved 2011 11 08 PC Mojo Webs with MOJO from Cave Creek AZ 2008 04 25 Frequency Letter bands Microwave Encyclopedia Microwaves101 com Archived from the original on 2014 07 14 Retrieved 2011 11 08 Letter Designations of Microwave Bands Skolnik Merrill I 2001 Introduction to Radar Systems Third Ed p 522 McGraw Hill 1962 Edition full text Nave Rod Interaction of Radiation with Matter HyperPhysics Retrieved 20 October 2014 Goldsmith JR December 1997 Epidemiologic evidence relevant to radar microwave effects Environmental Health Perspectives 105 Suppl 6 1579 1587 doi 10 2307 3433674 JSTOR 3433674 PMC 1469943 PMID 9467086 Andjus R K Lovelock J E 1955 Reanimation of rats from body temperatures between 0 and 1 C by microwave diathermy The Journal of Physiology 128 3 541 546 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 1955 sp005323 PMC 1365902 PMID 13243347 Lipman Richard M Tripathi Brenda J Tripathi Ramesh C November December 1988 Cataracts Induced by Microwave and Ionizing Radiation Survey of Ophthalmology 33 3 206 207 doi 10 1016 0039 6257 88 90088 4 PMID 3068822 Hong Sungook 2001 Wireless From Marconi s Black box to the Audion MIT Press pp 5 9 22 ISBN 978 0262082983 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Roer T G 2012 Microwave Electronic Devices Springer Science and Business Media pp 1 12 ISBN 978 1461525004 a b c d e Sarkar T K Mailloux Robert Oliner Arthur A 2006 History of Wireless John Wiley and Sons pp 474 486 ISBN 978 0471783015 Emerson D T February 1998 The work of Jagdish Chandra Bose 100 years of MM wave research National Radio Astronomy Observatory a b Packard Karle S September 1984 The Origin of Waveguides A Case of Multiple Rediscovery PDF IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques MTT 32 9 961 969 Bibcode 1984ITMTT 32 961P CiteSeerX 10 1 1 532 8921 doi 10 1109 tmtt 1984 1132809 Retrieved March 24 2015 Strutt William Lord Rayleigh February 1897 On the passage of electric waves through tubes or the vibrations of dielectric cylinders Philosophical Magazine 43 261 125 132 doi 10 1080 14786449708620969 Kizer George 2013 Digital Microwave Communication Engineering Point to Point Microwave Systems John Wiley and Sons p 7 ISBN 978 1118636800 Lee Thomas H 2004 Planar Microwave Engineering A Practical Guide to Theory Measurement and Circuits Vol 1 Cambridge University Press pp 18 118 ISBN 978 0521835268 Microwaves span the English Channel PDF Short Wave Craft Vol 6 no 5 New York Popular Book Co September 1935 pp 262 310 Retrieved March 24 2015 a b Free E E August 1931 Searchlight radio with the new 7 inch waves PDF Radio News Vol 8 no 2 New York Radio Science Publications pp 107 109 Retrieved March 24 2015 Ayto John 2002 20th century words p 269 ISBN 978 7560028743 Riordan Michael Lillian Hoddeson 1988 Crystal fire the invention of the transistor and the birth of the information age US W W Norton amp Company pp 89 92 ISBN 978 0 393 31851 7 Cooking with Short Waves PDF Short Wave Craft 4 7 394 November 1933 Retrieved 23 March 2015 Kurokawa K July 1969 Some Basic Characteristics of Broadband Negative Resistance Oscillator Circuits Bell System Tech J 48 6 1937 1955 doi 10 1002 j 1538 7305 1969 tb01158 x Retrieved December 8 2012 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Microwaves radio EM Talk Microwave Engineering Tutorials and Tools Millimeter Wave and Microwave Waveguide dimension chart Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Microwave amp oldid 1152337519, 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