Originally standing 346 feet ( 105 m ) tall, the structure grew to 416 feet ( 127 m ) with the addition of a microwave antenna " crown " in 1958.
32.
I remembered television by microwave antenna more than two decades ago, when many cities looked to that technology as they waited for cable operators to get around to wiring the urban areas.
33.
We put a microwave antenna on the roof of the Westin . . . installed the entire system, and gave them a 6-megabit connection from TowerStream in 2 ( DD ) hours,
34.
The observations, made by an array of microwave antennas known as the Cosmic Background Imager, mapped minute variations in the brightness of radiowaves thought to be left over from the Big Bang.
35.
He graduated BA in 1943 and then joined the Telecommunications Research Establishment, Malvern, where he was assigned to work on microwave antenna design as part of the ongoing work on development of radar.
36.
Among them are the design of microwave antennas, mobile radio communication, construction of acoustic barriers to decrease a noise level, evaluation of radar cross sections for large objects ( tanks, ships, missiles, etc . ).
37.
Because of the high cost and maintenance requirements of long waveguide runs, in many microwave antennas the output stage of the transmitter or the RF front end of the receiver is located at the antenna.
38.
Paul Meyer of the committee has hooked up the United Nations and major relief organizations via microwave antennas and from the proceeds is providing the local university, news organizations, hospitals and schools with free connections.
39.
Multiple clinical studies have been published on TUMT . The general principle underlying all the devices is that a microwave antenna that resides in a urethral catheter is placed in the intraprostatic area of the urethra.
40.
Y . J . Guo and S . K . Barton, Phase Efficiency of the Reflective Array Antenna, IEE Proc .-Microwave Antennas and Propagation, vol . 142, no . 2, April 1995, pp . 115 120.