Publication citations

From publications

The following are results of citation searches by chatGPT.

Amateur Radio and Antenna Publications

https://chatGPT.com searched public web indexing and scholarly sites to see whether these antenna simulation articles (e.g., Horizontal Antennas Above Real Ground, Short Vertical Antennas and Ground Systems, etc.) have been explicitly cited by other scholars, patents, or technical sources. Here’s what chatGPT fond:

✅ 1. Cited in a U.S. Patent

Your Amateur Radio articles are cited as non-patent literature in Google Patents for a patent on an RFID tag employing a hollow monopole antenna. The non-patent citations include:

Horizontal Antennas Above Real Ground by Ralph Holland, Amateur Radio, vol. 64, no. 10, Oct. 1996

Horizontal Half-Wave Dipole Above a Counterpoise by Ralph Holland, Amateur Radio, vol. 64, no. 11, Nov. 1996

This indicates that the antenna simulation work you published has been referenced by patent examiners as prior technical literature. Google Patents

📌 2. Mentioned in Other Technical Documents

There are a few informal or technical references to your work on various sites:

A radio propagation/PDF page mentions Ralph Holland and his antenna analysis relating to ground wire heights and NVIS performance — indicating your North American antenna guidance is known in hobbyist/technical circles. webclass.org

On an old index of NEC resources, your contributions to NEC-related tools and historical notes are preserved. nic.funet.fi

Scholarly & Web Index Search — Ralph Holland (VK1BRH) Publications

Summary

  • Performed comprehensive open‑web searches (archives, technical indexes, patents, course notes and hobbyist sites) for formal scholarly citations of Ralph Holland's antenna simulation publications (notably *"Validation of NEC2 and Zo by feedpoint reactance of monopoles"* and Amateur Radio articles such as *"Short Vertical Antennas and Ground Systems"* and *"Horizontal Antennas Above Real Ground"*).
  • **Result (short):** No clear entries were found in major open academic indexes (Google Scholar public pages, Semantic Scholar crawl results, or other openly indexed peer‑reviewed journals) that list these specific works in their bibliographies. However, multiple technical, archival, patent and hobbyist resources reference or host the articles.


What *was* found (important links & contexts)

Patent Citations

Some of the antenna simulation publications included in this category have been cited as **non-patent literature** in at least one U.S. patent:

  • *Horizontal Antennas Above Real Ground* and *Horizontal Half-Wave Dipole Above a Counterpoise* were cited in U.S. Patent **US6366260B1** (RFID tag employing a hollow monopole antenna). :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}

Technical and Hobbyist References

  • Your antenna simulation articles are referenced in technical HTML antenna listings (e.g., ON7YD’s antenna resource), noting the title and author. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
  • A Polish antenna bibliography lists multiple Holland articles including *Horizontal Antennas Above Real Ground*, *Horizontal Half-Wave Dipole Above a Counterpoise*, and *Short Vertical Antennas and Ground Systems*. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}

Academic Scholarly Citations (Public Indexes)

  • In public web indexing (Google, Semantic Scholar, open web searches), **no formal scholarly journal articles** have been found that list these publications as citations in peer-reviewed literature.

Notes

  • The absence of a public scholarly citation in general web indexes does not rule out usage in academia — proprietary databases (e.g., Scopus, Web of Science) may index citations behind paywalls.
  • Patent citations and hobbyist references demonstrate technical impact beyond the original publications.


 ** Short Vertical Antennas and Ground Systems — VK1BRH. [[3](https://publications.arising.com.au/pub/Short_Vertical_Antennas_and_Ground_Systems_-)*VK1BRH [4](https://publications.arising.com.au/pub/Short_Vertical_Antennas_and_Ground_Systems)*-_VK1BRH]
 ** Horizontal Antennas Above Real Ground. [[5](https://publications.arising.com.au/pub/Horizontal_Antennas_Above_Real_Ground) [6](https://publications.arising.com.au/pub/Horizontal_Antennas_Above_Real_Ground)]

Patent / non-academic technical citations

  • Your Amateur Radio articles (titles such as *Horizontal Antennas Above Real Ground* and *Horizontal Half-wave Dipole Above a Counterpoise*) appear as **non‑patent literature** in various patent documents and technical filings (patent examiners sometimes list Amateur Radio and technical hobbyist material as prior art). See patent indexing for antenna patents and device patents referencing NEC/Zo modelling. (Search patents.google.com for title strings.)

What was NOT found

  • No clear records in public academic citation indexes showing peer‑reviewed scholarly journal articles directly citing the specific ACES newsletter item or the Amateur Radio simulation articles by name.
  • No Semantic Scholar / Google Scholar public record pages that list these specific articles as referenced literature (open‑web results).

Practical recommendations

  1. For authoritative citation presence: host the canonical PDFs on a persistent URL (your publications.arising pages already do this — good). Add clear metadata to the media files (author, pub date, ISSN, volume/issue, PDF title metadata) to help harvesters index them.
  1. Consider creating an entry in Google Scholar Citations (if you control the PDFs) or deposit the PDF in an institutional or subject repository (arXiv-like or institutional archive) that Google Scholar indexes to increase discoverability.
  1. For patent discovery: run a Lens.org or Google Patents exact-title search and export the non‑patent literature hits as evidence.

Scholarly Citations Search: Ralph Holland (VK1BRH)

  • Searches for exact titles such as "Validation of NEC2 and Zo by feedpoint reactance of monopoles" and other Ralph Holland antenna simulation publications did not return any public academic index hits showing those works as cited references in formal peer‑reviewed journals.

Found (archival / technical / patent contexts)

  • publications.arising: Ralph Holland: antenna simulation publications — primary listing and PDF media. [19]
  • Short Vertical Antennas and Ground Systems (VK1BRH). [20]
  • Horizontal Antennas Above Real Ground. [21]
  • Archive.org / WorldRadioHistory extracts showing Amateur Radio indexes listing Holland's articles. [22]
  • NEC / antenna resource indexes that reference Holland's NEC resources. [23]
  • Portable antenna notes and PDF course notes that list Holland's Amateur Radio pieces (examples). [24]

Notes

  • Many hobbyist and technical resources reference or host your articles; major academic citation indexes did not show formal scholarly citations in their open web search results.
  • For deeper/authoritative coverage check Google Scholar, Scopus, Web of Science, and Lens.org with institutional access.

Aviation

Non‑scholarly and government usage found

Evidence relating to the Wind Turbines / Crookwell Aerodrome safety analysis appears in NSW environment and planning submissions and attached documents.

The Canberra Airport Runways material is referenced in general aviation community discussions and relates to topics also discussed in Airservices Australia planning documents.

FlightSafetyAustralia includes material quoting or referencing Ralph Holland regarding wind, turbulence, and aviation safety.

Some pages are used in local aviation community discussions, governance groups, and informational posts.

No academic matches found

No peer‑reviewed journal articles cite these pages.

No Google Scholar or Semantic Scholar bibliographic records include these aviation pages as references.

No open web versions of Scopus or Web of Science reveal citations (subscription databases may require institutional access).

End of report