ITU frequency bands: Difference between revisions
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See [[IEEE frequency bands]] for radar designations used widely in civilian practice, and the [[EU-NATO-US frequency bands]] for a nomenclature that works well in fine-grained radar band discussion. | See [[IEEE frequency bands]] for radar designations used widely in civilian practice, and the [[EU-NATO-US frequency bands]] for a nomenclature that works well in fine-grained radar band discussion. | ||
The very lowest bands have no radar applications, but, among other things, have a critical military application in communicating, at a very low data rate, with submerged [[submarine]]s. | |||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
Line 8: | Line 10: | ||
! Frequency range | ! Frequency range | ||
! ITU band | ! ITU band | ||
|- | |||
| 3-30 Hz | |||
| ELF (Extremely Low Frequency) | |||
|- | |||
| 30Hz to 300Hz | |||
| SLF (Super Low Frequency) | |||
|- | |||
| 300Hz to 3000Hz | |||
| ULF (Ultra Low Frequency) | |||
|- | |||
| 3kHz to 30kHz | |||
| VLF (Very Low Frequency) | |||
|- | |||
| 30-300 KHz | |||
| LF (Low Frequency; "[[longwave]]") | |||
|- | |- | ||
| 300KHz-3 MHz | | 300KHz-3 MHz | ||
| MF | | MF (Medium Frequency; "[[medium wave]]") | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 3-30 MHz | | 3-30 MHz | ||
| HF | | HF (High Frequency; "[[shortwave]]") | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 30-300 MHz | | 30-300 MHz | ||
| VHF | | VHF (Very High Frequency) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 300 MHz -3 GHz | | 300 MHz -3 GHz | ||
| UHF | | UHF (Ultra High Frequency) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 3-30 GHz | | 3-30 GHz | ||
| SHF | | SHF (Super High Frequency) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 30-300 GHz | | 30-300 GHz | ||
| EHF | | EHF (Extremely High Frequency) | ||
|} | |} | ||
Millimeter wave frequencies begin at 18 GHz in SHF and go to the lower third of EHF. Submillimeter wave start roughly above 100 GHz; they [[blur]] into the longer [[infrared light]] frequencies.[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
Latest revision as of 17:01, 30 August 2024
The International Telecommunications Union has defined a system of terminology for electromagnetic frequencies used for radio and radar. While it is probably the most user-friendly of the three major systems in use, its categories are too coarsely grained for describing radar uses. It is, however, a good set of terms for frequencies used in communications.
See IEEE frequency bands for radar designations used widely in civilian practice, and the EU-NATO-US frequency bands for a nomenclature that works well in fine-grained radar band discussion.
The very lowest bands have no radar applications, but, among other things, have a critical military application in communicating, at a very low data rate, with submerged submarines.
Frequency range | ITU band |
---|---|
3-30 Hz | ELF (Extremely Low Frequency) |
30Hz to 300Hz | SLF (Super Low Frequency) |
300Hz to 3000Hz | ULF (Ultra Low Frequency) |
3kHz to 30kHz | VLF (Very Low Frequency) |
30-300 KHz | LF (Low Frequency; "longwave") |
300KHz-3 MHz | MF (Medium Frequency; "medium wave") |
3-30 MHz | HF (High Frequency; "shortwave") |
30-300 MHz | VHF (Very High Frequency) |
300 MHz -3 GHz | UHF (Ultra High Frequency) |
3-30 GHz | SHF (Super High Frequency) |
30-300 GHz | EHF (Extremely High Frequency) |
Millimeter wave frequencies begin at 18 GHz in SHF and go to the lower third of EHF. Submillimeter wave start roughly above 100 GHz; they blur into the longer infrared light frequencies.