I am looking at a question (though my queries here are more regarding th underlying conepcts, which I don't quite understand) about a radio antenna that is polarising a conducting sphere.
For reference, the question is
A radar set to operate at a frequency $\nu$ has an antenna which emitts a narrow beam of radio waves with Ponting flux $N(\theta, \phi)= ...$ (I have avoided putting the actual functional form here, as I am not sure I can redistribute the question). The total emitted power is P, and the receiver input imepedance is R. The antenna is also used as a detector with a detection limits set by V_{n} as the minimum voltage across the matched load that can be detected. Find the maximum range at which the radar set can detect a perfectly conducting sphere of radius a.
My question here is regarding the poyntiny flux and its role. I would have thought that the electric field strength is $E^2 = 2NZ_0$, with $Z_0$ the impedance of free space, straight from the definition of the Poynting flux as $N=E \times H$. And yet, then I would obtain an electric field strength that does not depend on the distance from the source (which I would think is actually correct for a given electromagnetic wave) but then the maximum dipole moment of the sphere would also not depend on the distance from the radar, if I simply use $p=\alpha E$. I would be grateful if someone could explain where the distance dependence comes in here.