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  2. Circular polarization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circular_polarization

    Circular polarization is a limiting case of elliptical polarization. The other special case is the easier-to-understand linear polarization . All three terms were coined by Augustin-Jean Fresnel , in a memoir read to the French Academy of Sciences on 9 December 1822.

  3. Turnstile antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turnstile_antenna

    Circular polarization was used for spacecraft (satellite and missile) communication, since circular polarization is not sensitive to the relative orientation of the antennas, and the space vehicle's antenna could have any orientation with respect to the ground antenna. High gain Yagi turnstile antennas were often used for the ground station.

  4. Dipole antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dipole_antenna

    Turnstile antennas can be stacked and fed in phase to realize an omnidirectional broadside array or phased for an end-fire array with circular polarization. The batwing antenna is a turnstile antenna with its linear elements widened as in a bow-tie antenna, again for the purpose of widening its resonant frequency and thus usable over a larger ...

  5. Loop antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loop_antenna

    Unlike a dipole antenna, the polarization of a resonant loop antenna is not obvious from the orientation of the loop itself, but depends on the placement of its feedpoint. [e] If a vertically oriented loop is fed at the bottom, then its radiation will be horizontally polarized; feeding it from the side will make it vertically polarized.

  6. Antenna types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antenna_types

    This antenna is unusual in that it radiates in all directions (no nulls in the radiation or reception pattern), with horizontal polarization in directions coplanar with the elements, circular polarization normal to that plane, and elliptical polarization in other directions. Used for receiving signals from satellites, as circular polarization ...

  7. Antenna (radio) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antenna_(radio)

    Note that for circular polarization, optical researchers use the opposite right-hand rule [citation needed] from the one used by radio engineers. It is best for the receiving antenna to match the polarization of the transmitted wave for optimum reception.

  8. Vivaldi antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vivaldi_antenna

    A Vivaldi antenna or Vivaldi aerial [1] or tapered slot antenna [2] is a co-planar broadband-antenna, which can be made from a solid piece of sheet metal, a printed circuit board, or from a dielectric plate metalized on one or both sides. Patterned Vivaldi antenna, made from double-sided printed circuit board material

  9. Halo antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halo_antenna

    A halo antenna is a self-resonant antenna: Its feedpoint impedance is reactance-free / purely resistive at the design frequency. A small loop antenna, on the other hand, has lower radiation resistance [b] and is not self-resonant; it requires some form of impedance matching to counter the loop's reactance – in practice, this usually consists ...