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10.8.5 Why Is Coaxial Cable Used For Radio Frequency Systems?

Explains the coaxial geometry, shielding, characteristic impedances (50 Ω and 75 Ω), attenuation, power handling, and typical applications including radio, television, instrumentation, and satellite systems.

  1. What Is a Coaxial Cable?
  2. Why Does Coaxial Cable Confine the Electromagnetic Fields?
  3. Why Isn't Ordinary Twin Cable Suitable for RF?
  4. Why Are 50 Ω and 75 Ω the Most Common Impedances?
  5. How Much Signal Is Lost in a Coaxial Cable?
  6. Why Does the Skin Effect Become Important?
  7. Where Is Coaxial Cable Used?
  8. Why Has Fibre Optic Cable Replaced Coaxial Cable in Many Networks?
  9. Does Coaxial Cable Still Have a Future?
  10. Why Is Coaxial Cable Still So Important?
  11. What Should You Remember?