nzart-exam-generator/files/N28.TXT

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% FILENAME = N28.TXT
% Propagation
% Release version 3, October 2001
%QUESTION 1
#28.1 A 'skip zone' is:
the distance between the antenna and where the refracted wave first
returns to earth
the distance between the far end of the ground wave and where the
refracted wave first returns to earth
the distance between any two refracted waves
a zone caused by lost sky waves
% ans 2
%QUESTION 2
#28.2 The medium which reflects high frequency radio waves back to the earth's
surface is called the:
biosphere
stratosphere
ionosphere
troposphere
% ans 3
%QUESTION 3
#28.3 The highest frequency that will be reflected back to the earth at any given time
is known as the:
UHF
MUF
OWF
LUF
% ans 2
%QUESTION 4
#28.4 All communications frequencies throughout the spectrum are affected in
varying degrees by the:
atmospheric conditions
ionosphere
aurora borealis
sun
% ans 4
%QUESTION 5
#28.5 Solar cycles have an average length of:
1 year
3 years
6 years
11 years
% ans 4
%QUESTION 6
#28.6 The 'skywave' is another name for the:
ionospheric wave
tropospheric wave
ground wave
inverted wave
% ans 1
%QUESTION 7
#28.7 The polarisation of an electromagnetic wave is defined by the direction of:
the H field
propagation
the E field
the receiving antenna
% ans 3
%QUESTION 8
#28.8 That portion of HF radiation which is directly affected by the surface of the
earth is called:
ionospheric wave
local field wave
ground wave
inverted wave
% ans 3
%QUESTION 9
#28.9 Radio wave energy on frequencies below 4 MHz during daylight hours is
almost completely absorbed by this ionospheric layer:
C
D
E
F
% ans 2
%QUESTION 10
#28.10 Because of high absorption levels at frequencies below 4 MHz during daylight
hours, only high angle signals are normally reflected back by this layer:
C
D
E
F
% ans 3
%QUESTION 11
#28.11 Scattered patches of high ionisation developed seasonally at the height of one
of the layers is called:
sporadic-E
patchy
random reflectors
trans-equatorial ionisation
% ans 1
%QUESTION 12
#28.12 For long distance propagation, the radiation angle of energy from the antenna
should be:
less than 30 degrees
more than 30 degrees but less than forty-five
more than 45 degrees but less than ninety
90 degrees
% ans 1
%QUESTION 13
#28.13 The path radio waves normally follow from a transmitting antenna to a
receiving antenna at VHF and higher frequencies is a:
circular path going north or south from the transmitter
great circle path
straight line
bent path via the ionosphere
% ans 3
%QUESTION 14
#28.14 A radio wave may follow two or more different paths during propagation and
produce slowly-changing phase differences between signals at the receiver
resulting in a phenomenon called:
absorption
baffling
fading
skip
% ans 3
%QUESTION 15
#28.15 The distance from the far end of the ground wave to the nearest point where the sky wave
returns to the earth is called the:
skip distance
radiation distance
skip angle
skip zone
% ans 4
%QUESTION 16
#28.16 High Frequency long-distance propagation is most dependent on:
ionospheric reflection
tropospheric reflection
ground reflection
inverted reflection
% ans 1
%QUESTION 17
#28.17 The layer of the ionosphere mainly responsible for long distance
communication is:
C
D
E
F
% ans 4
%QUESTION 18
#28.18 The ionisation level of the ionosphere reaches its minimum:
just after sunset
just before sunrise
at noon
at midnight
% ans 2
%QUESTION 19
#28.19 One of the ionospheric layers splits into two parts during the day called:
A & B
D1 & D2
E1 & E2
F1 & F2
% ans 4
%QUESTION 20
#28.20 Signal fadeouts resulting from an 'ionospheric storm' or 'sudden ionospheric
disturbance' are usually attributed to:
heating of the ionised layers
over-use of the signal path
insufficient transmitted power
solar flare activity
% ans 4
%QUESTION 21
#28.21 The 80 metre band is useful for working:
in the summer at midday during high sunspot activity
long distance during daylight hours when absorption is not significant
all points on the earth's surface
up to several thousand kilometres in darkness but atmospheric and
man-made noises tend to be high
% ans 4
%QUESTION 22
#28.22 The skip distance of radio signals is determined by the:
type of transmitting antenna used
power fed to the final amplifier of the transmitter
only the angle of radiation from the antenna
both the height of the ionosphere and the angle of radiation from the
antenna
% ans 4
%QUESTION 23
#28.23 Three recognised layers of the ionosphere that affect radio propagation are:
A, E, F
B, D, E
C, E, F
D, E, F
% ans 4
%QUESTION 24
#28.24 Propagation on 80 metres during the summer daylight hours is limited to
relatively short distances because of
high absorption in the D layer
the disappearance of the E layer
poor refraction by the F layer
pollution in the T layer
% ans 1
%QUESTION 25
#28.25 The distance from the transmitter to the nearest point where the sky wave
returns to the earth is called the:
angle of radiation
maximum usable frequency
skip distance
skip zone
% ans 3
%QUESTION 26
#28.26 A variation in received signal strength caused by slowly changing differences
in path lengths is called:
absorption
fading
fluctuation
path loss
% ans 2
%QUESTION 27
#28.27 VHF and UHF bands are frequently used for satellite communication because:
waves at these frequencies travel to and from the satellite relatively
unaffected by the ionosphere
the Doppler frequency change caused by satellite motion is much less
than at HF
satellites move too fast for HF waves to follow
the Doppler effect would cause HF waves to be shifted into the VHF
and UHF bands.
% ans 1
%QUESTION 28
#28.28 The 'critical frequency' is defined as the:
highest frequency to which your transmitter can be tuned
lowest frequency which is reflected back to earth at vertical incidence
minimum usable frequency
highest frequency which will be reflected back to earth at vertical
incidence
% ans 4
%QUESTION 29
#28.29 The speed of a radio wave:
varies indirectly to the frequency
is the same as the speed of light
is infinite in space
is always less than half the speed of light
% ans 2
%QUESTION 30
#28.30 The MUF for a given radio path is the:
mean of the maximum and minimum usable frequencies
maximum usable frequency
minimum usable frequency
mandatory usable frequency
% ans 2
%QUESTION 31
#28.31 The position of the E layer in the ionosphere is:
above the F layer
below the F layer
below the D layer
sporadic
% ans 2
%QUESTION 32
#28.32 A distant amplitude-modulated station is heard quite loudly but the modulation
is at times severely distorted. A similar local station is not affected. The
probable cause of this is:
transmitter malfunction
selective fading
a sudden ionospheric disturbance
front end overload
% ans 2
%QUESTION 33
#28.33 Skip distance is a term associated with signals through the ionosphere. Skip
effects are due to:
reflection and refraction from the ionosphere
selective fading of local signals
high gain antennas being used
local cloud cover
% ans 1
%QUESTION 34
#28.34 The type of atmospheric layers which will best return signals to earth are:
oxidised layers
heavy cloud layers
ionised layers
sun spot layers
% ans 3
%QUESTION 35
#28.35 The ionosphere:
is a magnetised belt around the earth
consists of magnetised particles around the earth
is formed from layers of ionised gases around the earth
is a spherical belt of solar radiation around the earth
% ans 3
%QUESTION 36
#28.36 The skip distance of a sky wave will be greatest when the:
ionosphere is most densely ionised
signal given out is strongest
angle of radiation is smallest
polarisation is vertical
% ans 3
%QUESTION 37
#28.37 If the height of the reflecting layer of the ionosphere increases, the skip
distance of a high frequency transmission:
stays the same
decreases
varies regularly
becomes greater
% ans 4
%QUESTION 38
#28.38 If the frequency of a transmitted signal is so high that we no longer receive a
reflection from the ionosphere, the signal frequency is above the:
speed of light
sun spot frequency
skip distance
maximum usable frequency
% ans 4
%QUESTION 39
#28.39 A 'line of sight' transmission between two stations uses mainly the:
ionosphere
troposphere
sky wave
ground wave
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%QUESTION 40
#28.40 The distance travelled by ground waves in air:
is the same for all frequencies
is less at higher frequencies
is more at higher frequencies
depends on the maximum usable frequency
% ans 2
%QUESTION 41
#28.41 The radio wave from the transmitter to the ionosphere and back to earth is
correctly known as the:
sky wave
skip wave
surface wave
F layer
% ans 1
%QUESTION 42
#28.42 Reception of high frequency radio waves beyond 4000 km normally occurs by
the:
ground wave
skip wave
surface wave
sky wave
% ans 4
%QUESTION 43
#28.43 A 28 MHz radio signal is more likely to be heard over great distances:
if the transmitter power is reduced
during daylight hours
only during the night
at full moon
% ans 2
%QUESTION 44
#28.44 The number of high frequency bands open to long distance communication at
any time depends on:
the highest frequency at which ionospheric reflection can occur
the number of frequencies the receiver can tune
the power being radiated by the transmitting station
the height of the transmitting antenna
% ans 1
%QUESTION 45
#28.45 Regular changes in the ionosphere occur approximately every 11:
days
months
years
centuries
% ans 3
%QUESTION 46
#28.46 When a HF transmitted radio signal reaches a receiver, small changes in the
ionosphere can cause:
consistently stronger signals
a change in the ground wave signal
variations in signal strength
consistently weaker signals
% ans 3
%QUESTION 47
#28.47 The usual effect of ionospheric storms is to:
increase the maximum usable frequency
cause a fade-out of sky-wave signals
produce extreme weather changes
prevent communications by ground wave
% ans 2
%QUESTION 48
#28.48 Changes in received signal strength when sky wave propagation is used are
called:
ground wave losses
modulation losses
fading
sunspots
% ans 3
%QUESTION 49
#28.49 Although high frequency signals may be received from a distant station by a
sky wave at a certain time, it may not be possible to hear them an hour later.
This may be due to:
changes in the ionosphere
shading of the earth by clouds
changes in atmospheric temperature
absorption of the ground wave signal
% ans 1
%QUESTION 50
#28.50 VHF or UHF signals transmitted towards a tall building are often received at a
more distant point in another direction because:
these waves are easily bent by the ionosphere
these waves are easily reflected by objects in their path
you can never tell in which direction a wave is travelling
tall buildings have elevators
% ans 2