Fraunhofer Distance Calculator

Model far-field limits using aperture size and wavelength. Review near-field status, margins, and observation distance. Export results, charts, and tables for technical reporting tasks.

Calculator Inputs

Enter the largest aperture or antenna dimension, then choose wavelength or frequency mode. Add observation distance to classify the field region.

Reset

Formula Used

Fraunhofer distance:
R = 2D² / λ
Wavelength from frequency:
λ = c / f
Reactive near-field limit:
Rreactive = 0.62 × √(D³ / λ)

Here, R is the far-field distance, D is the largest physical dimension of the antenna or aperture, λ is wavelength, c is the speed of light, and f is frequency.

The calculator also applies an optional safety factor to create a more conservative recommended measurement distance.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the largest aperture or antenna dimension.
  2. Select the matching size unit.
  3. Choose frequency mode or wavelength mode.
  4. Provide the signal value in the selected mode.
  5. Optionally enter the observation distance to classify the field region.
  6. Set a safety factor if you want extra measurement margin.
  7. Choose the number of decimal places.
  8. Click Calculate to show the result above the form.
  9. Use the CSV or PDF buttons to export your result summary.

Example Data Table

Case Largest Dimension Signal Input Wavelength Fraunhofer Distance
Lab horn antenna 0.20 m 10 GHz 0.02998 m 2.67 m
Compact aperture 0.50 m 5 GHz 0.05996 m 8.34 m
Large reflector 2.00 m 3 GHz 0.09993 m 80.06 m
Optical opening 0.10 m 500 nm 0.0000005 m 40,000 m

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is Fraunhofer distance?

Fraunhofer distance is the minimum range where wavefront curvature becomes small enough for far-field analysis. Beyond this distance, angular patterns and radiation measurements are more reliable and easier to interpret.

2. Why does aperture size matter so much?

The formula depends on the square of the largest dimension. Doubling the aperture size increases the Fraunhofer distance by four times, so large antennas and openings need much longer measurement ranges.

3. Can I enter frequency instead of wavelength?

Yes. The calculator accepts either frequency or wavelength. When frequency is entered, wavelength is computed using the speed of light, then used in the Fraunhofer distance equation automatically.

4. What is the largest dimension D?

D is the maximum physical size of the radiating structure or opening. For rectangular apertures, use the largest side. For circular antennas, use the overall diameter.

5. What is the difference between basic and recommended distance?

The basic value comes directly from the standard equation. The recommended value multiplies that result by your safety factor, giving extra range margin for practical testing and setup planning.

6. What does the field-region status mean?

The status compares your observation distance with standard limits. It shows whether the point lies in the reactive near-field, radiating near-field, or true far-field region.

7. Is this calculator useful for optics too?

Yes. The same far-field concept applies to diffraction and optical apertures. Very small wavelengths can produce very large Fraunhofer distances when the aperture dimension is comparatively large.

8. Why include angular resolution?

Angular resolution adds context to the far-field result. It estimates how narrow the diffraction-limited beam can be for the chosen dimension and wavelength, which helps in measurement interpretation.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.