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dipole A monopole with a ground balance (mirror image).
Ãâó: www.novastars.com/antenna/antenna-glossary.htm
dipole a compact source of magnetic force, with two magnetic poles. A bar magnet, coil or current loop, if their size is small, create a dipole field. The Earth's field, as a crude approximation, also resembles that of a dipole.
Ãâó: www-spof.gsfc.nasa.gov/Education/wgloss.html
dipole moment [NIA] For a transmitter, the product of the area of a coil, the number of turns of wire, and the current flowing in the coil. At a distance significantly larger than the size of the coil, the magnetic field from a coil will be the same if the dipole moment product is the same. For a receiver coil, this is the product of the area and the number of turns. The sensitivity to a magnetic field (assuming the source is far away) will be the same if the dipole moment is the same.
Ãâó: www.fugroairborne.com.au/Resources/glossary.shtml
dipole Gentian Violet.
Ãâó: www.centurionndt.com/glossary.htm
dipole Magnetized object that possesses north and south magnetic poles. A bar magnet and Earth are two examples.
Ãâó: www.physics.gmu.edu/~jevans/astr103/CourseNotes/Gl...
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