Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: both (a) and (b) only
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:At microwave and millimeter-wave frequencies, engineers often choose between coaxial cables and hollow metallic waveguides. Understanding the comparative strengths of waveguides helps in high-power links, radar front-ends, and low-loss feed networks for antennas.
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:
Waveguides confine fields with conducting walls supporting TE/TM modes, while coax supports a TEM mode. Surface current distribution and field strengths drive power handling and loss. Hollow guides avoid dielectric loss (usually air-filled) and distribute current over larger metal areas, usually yielding lower insertion loss and higher breakdown thresholds for a given cross-section at microwave frequencies.
Step-by-Step Solution:
1) Power handling: In coax, dielectric breakdown and inner-conductor heating limit power. Waveguides, being air-filled with larger field volumes, generally withstand higher peak and average powers for comparable sizes.2) Attenuation: Coax loss includes conductor and dielectric loss. Waveguide loss is dominated by conductor loss only and often achieves substantially lower dB/m above a few GHz.3) Mechanical/Cost: Precision waveguides require machining, flanges, and alignment. They are typically more expensive and less flexible than coax, not cheaper.Verification / Alternative check:
Vendor datasheets regularly show lower loss per meter and higher power ratings for standard waveguide bands (e.g., WR-xx) compared to common coax lines at the same frequency.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Option D claims waveguides are cheaper and simpler; in practice, coax is cheaper and more flexible. Option E (“all of the above”) includes D and is therefore incorrect. Options A or B alone omit the full set of true advantages, hence C is the best answer.
Common Pitfalls:
Assuming coax is always inferior: at lower microwave frequencies or for flexible runs, high-quality coax can be adequate. Conversely, assuming waveguide bends and twists are trivial—mechanical tolerances matter greatly.
Final Answer:
both (a) and (b) only
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