Taking Advantage of Antenna Polarization
Use electromagnetic polarization to avoid noise from other antennas in the same spectrum.
One
extremely important property of
electromagnetic waves to consider is
polarization
. An electromagnetic wave is
actually comprised of two simultaneous and inseparable fields: the
electrical field and the magnetic field. These two fields are
perpendicular to each other, and both are perpendicular to the
direction in which the wave propagates.
An antenna must be oriented to match the polarization of the incoming energy, or it will only receive a small portion of it. Practically speaking, this means that antennas with matching polarization will see each other well, while antennas with opposite polarization will hardly see each other at all.
Both horizontally and vertically polarized antennas are common, but in some exotic antennas, circular (clockwise or counter-clockwise) polarization is possible. The polarization of the antenna on each end of a link must match, or the radios will have trouble talking to each other. Omnis and sectors are generally vertically polarized, although horizontally polarized variations do exist (see [Hack #77] for an example of a do-it-yourself horizontally polarized omni). Yagis and dishes can be mounted vertically or horizontally, depending on the application.
On a long distance point-to-point link, be sure to try both horizontal and vertical polarization to see which incurs the lowest noise. Simply try the link one way, ...
Get Wireless Hacks now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.