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The study of very long-distance and around-the-world propagation of
HF radio waves becomes more urgent in connection with the problems
of long distance ground-based radio communications, communications
with space crafts and satellites, satellite-to-satellite
communications, around-the-world radar scanning, around-the-world
sounding of the ionosphere, etc. At pre sent, these investigations
have acquired particular interest because transmit ters which make
it possible to intentionally modify the ionospheric properties by
powerful radio waves have become available. In the case of radio
wave propagation over comparatively small distances (about 3000 -
5000 km, one - two hops), in a first approximation, the iono sphere
can be considered homogeneous in the horizontal direction. The
radio wave propagation theory in a horizontally-homogeneous, i. e.,
spherically symmetric ionosphere was developed with sufficient
completeness as early as in the 1920-1940's by Appleton, Ratcliffe,
Beynon, Booker, Martyn, and others. This theory is presented in
detail in the well-known monographs by Ginzburg (1967), Bremmer
(1946), and Budden (1961). Based on this theory, detailed methods
for the calculation of radio paths, determination of field
amplitude, and interpretation of vertical and oblique ionograms
have been developed. All these methods are well-known and widely
used in practice, see monographs by Al'pert (1974), Shchukin
(1940), and Davies (1969). An altogether different situation takes
place in the case of very long-dis tance multihop and
around-the-world propagation."
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