Radiation pattern plotting.
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Hi, I am having difficulties plotting the following function:
theta = -2:0.01:2;
y = (cos(pi/4*cos(theta*pi))-cos(pi/4))./(sin(theta*pi)*sin(pi/4));
I'd like it to resemble as closely as possible the plot in the attachment.

I'd certainly appreciate any assistance. I understand that patterncustom() is probably to be used, yet I am not quite sure how. NB The pi/4 argument in the expression for y is the result of substituting l=lambda/4 in the original.
2 Commenti
Hildo
il 28 Nov 2016
Modificato: Walter Roberson
il 29 Nov 2016
Appear that is a cylindrical coordinates plot ( y as function(theta,r) ). But you are just seeing a slice on the y-axis.
Yuval
il 28 Nov 2016
Risposta accettata
Più risposte (5)
David Goodmanson
il 20 Nov 2017
Hi Yuval,
I made a stylistic change to your code and defined theta at the very start with the factor of pi, rather than waiting to do that in the trig functions. Also the code below has the necessary range of -pi to pi and no more, rather than the duplicate overplotting that happens with -2pi to 2pi.
Since the formula you are using is the linear quantity E rather than intensity ~~E^2, the conversion to dB is 20*log(....) rather than 10*log(....).
theta = (-1:.001:1)*pi;
lambda = 1; % lambda is arbitrary in this calculation; pick a value
d = lambda/4; % d is entire dipole length, both halves
k = 2*pi/lambda;
kd2 = k*d/2;
y = 20*log10(abs((cos(kd2.*cos(theta))-cos(kd2))./sin(theta)));
y = y-max(y); % normalize y to obtain directivity; new max is 0 dB
y(y<-40) = -40;
figure(1)
polarplot(theta,y)
rlim([-40 0])
set(gca,'thetazerolocation','top','thetadir','clockwise')
The entire figure from the book can be obtained by concatenating the y's for for other values of d into a 5x2001 matrix and plotting, or the y's can be plotted sequentially using the 'hold on' command.
The figure is a classic one but must have been done by hand, because if you look at the trace for d = 3*lambda/4, it comes close to passing through the point theta = 150, r = 10 but misses the corresponding one theta = 30, r = 10 by a lot more. Those two spots should be symmetric. The pc of course does a lot better in that regard, but lacks the same aesthetic.
Tamir Suliman
il 29 Nov 2016
0 voti
Hello please check my code at
2 Commenti
Yuval
il 29 Nov 2016
Tamir Suliman
il 4 Dic 2016
Modificato: Tamir Suliman
il 4 Dic 2016
Sir if you look at the answer you could use polar to plot the function
polar(theta,y)
you could use view([90 -90])
to rotate it accordingly the script that I sent has a similar function and similar plots
this is the result of plotting your function

Dan Klemfuss
il 18 Nov 2017
0 voti
Good Evening. Can you please check you equation? I've plotted several antenna gain patterns before but the resulting plot doesn't quite match the expected output. You should be able to generate the plot using the following if you obtain the right equation:
theta = -pi:0.01:pi;
y = (cos(pi/4*cos(theta*pi))-cos(pi/4))./(sin(theta*pi)*sin(pi/4));
figure('Name','3-dB beamwidth=87°','NumberTitle','off','MenuBar','none');
polarplot(theta, y,'k')
rlim([min(y)-5 max(y)+5]);
ax = gca;
ax.ThetaDir = 'clockwise';
ax.ThetaZeroLocation = 'top';
plotTitle = sprintf('Radiation Pattern');
title(plotTitle)
Yuvan Sankar
il 4 Mar 2022
0 voti
theta = (-1:.001:1)*pi; lambda = 1; % lambda is arbitrary in this calculation; pick a value d = lambda/4; % d is entire dipole length, both halves k = 2*pi/lambda; kd2 = k*d/2; y = 20*log10(abs((cos(kd2.*cos(theta))-cos(kd2))./sin(theta))); y = y-max(y); % normalize y to obtain directivity; new max is 0 dB y(y<-40) = -40; figure(1) polarplot(theta,y) rlim([-40 0]) set(gca,'thetazerolocation','top','thetadir
Akash Pawar
il 16 Gen 2023
% Angle in degrees
theta = (-1:.001:1)*180;
% lambda is arbitrary in this calculation; pick a value
lambda = 1;
% d is entire dipole length, both halves
d = lambda/4;
k = 2*pi/lambda;
kd2 = k*d/2;
y = 20*log10(abs((cos(kd2.*cosd(theta))-cos(kd2))./sind(theta)));
y = y-max(y);
% normalize y to obtain directivity; new max is 0 dB
y(y<-40) = -40;
figure(1)
polarpattern(theta,y,'AngleDirection','cw','AngleAtTop',0,'AngleResolution',30)
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