Medium-Frequency Propagation In Coal Mines

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
H. Kenneth Sacks Robert L. Chufo
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The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
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12
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Abstract

Medium-frequency (MF) waves can propagate in a coal seam, bounded above and below by conducting rock, in an approximate transverse electro-magnetic (TEM) transmission-line mode with the electric field vertical and the magnetic field horizontal. The theory of this coal seam mode is applied to recent MF data for a number of mines in order to classify the propagation characteristic of the mines in a simple way. When conductors such as rails, trolleylines, or power cables are present in the vicinity of the measurement path, it is found that the magnetic field versus range plots have two distinct regions with very different slopes. This effect is attributed to coupling of the cylindrically spreading coal seam mode to a low-attenuation conductor guided mode. As a result, voice communications range between mobile transmitters can extend several thousand meters. The use of MF for mine communications is discussed.
Citation

APA: H. Kenneth Sacks Robert L. Chufo  Medium-Frequency Propagation In Coal Mines

MLA: H. Kenneth Sacks Robert L. Chufo Medium-Frequency Propagation In Coal Mines. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH),

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