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Antenna Glossary: Adaptive (Smart) Antenna Base Station

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Antenna Glossary

ADAPTIVE (SMART) ANTENNA

An antenna system having circuit elements associated with its radiating elements such that one or
more of the antenna properties are controlled by
the received signal.

ANTENNA

A metallic device used in the transmission and


reception of electromagnetic waves. An antenna is
a passive or an active device which permits transmission.

ANTENNA DIVERSITY

The use of two or more antennas to improve signal


quality.

ANTENNA POWER GAIN

The ratio of the antennas maximum radiation


intensity in a stated direction to the maximum
radiation intensity of a reference antenna (dipole,
isotropic antenna) with identical power applied to
both.

ATTENUATION

The loss in power of electromagnetic signals


between transmission and reception points.
AZIMUTH
Horizontal direction expressed as the angular distance between the direction of a fixed point (as the
observers heading) and the direction of the object.

BANDWIDTH

A range of consecutive frequencies comprised of a


band (i.e. the US cellular bandwidth is 72 MHz wide
between the frequencies of 824 MHz - 890 MHz)
over which an antenna shall perform without the
need of any adjustment.

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BASE STATION

In a cellular communication system, a base station


could be considered a central mode of transmission and reception for the network. This station
includes an omnidirectional antenna or several sectorial antennas.

BEAMWIDTH

The angle of signal coverage provided by an antenna. Beamwidth usually decreases as antenna gain
increases.

CABLE ASSEMBLY

A cable that is ready for installation in specific


applications and usually terminated with connectors.

CABLE LOSS

A numeric value describing the amount of signal


loss from one point on a length of cable to another.
This is measured in decibels (dB).

CENTER CONDUCTOR

A solid or stranded electrical conductor generally


composed of copper and located at the center of
the coaxial cable.

CENTER FED

Transmission line connection at the electrical center of an antenna radiator.

COAXIAL CABLE

Cable consisting of a single copper conductor in


the center surrounded by a plastic layer for insulation and a braided metal outer shield. Coax is used
to transfer radio frequency energy from the transmitter to the antenna.

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Antenna Glossary
COLLINEAR ARRAY

A system of two or more antenna radiators


arranged in a line and connected end-to-end to
generate a directed field pattern (serial linear
topology).

CONDUCTOR

A metal body such as tubing, rod or wire which


permits current to travel continuously along its
length.

dBm

A measure of power based upon the decibel scale,


but referenced to the milliWatt: i.e. 1 dBm = .001
Watt. dBm is often used to describe absolute
power level where the point of reference is 1 milliWatt. In high power applications the dBW is often
used with a
reference of 1 Watt.

dBW

The ratio of the power to 1 Watt expressed in decibels.

COUPLER

Referring to on-glass antennas, a coupler is the


two-piece interface between the coaxial cable
on the inside of the glass and the radiator on the
outside of the vehicle. It is designed to efficiently
couple RF energy through the glass. The formulation of the glass and glass thickness normally have
a substantial effect on coupler performance.

An antenna which is a dead short to a DC current,


and has a shunt-fed design. To RF it is not seen as
a short.

CURRENT LOOP

An antenna - usually a half wavelength long - split


at the exact center for connection to a feed line.
Also called a doublet.

DC GROUND

DIPOLE

A point of current maxima (antinode) on an antenna.

CURRENT NODE

A point of current minima on an antenna.

DECIBEL (dB)

The standard unit used to express transmission


gain or loss and relative power levels. See Basic
Antenna Concepts.

dBd

Quantification of the gain for an antenna in comparison with the gain of a dipole.

dBi

The dB power relative to an isotropic source.

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DIRECTIONAL ANTENNA

An antenna having the property of radiating or


receiving electromagnetic waves more effectively
in some directions than others.

DIRECTIVITY

The theoretical characteristic of an antenna to


concentrate power in only one direction, whether
transmitting or receiving.

DRIVEN ELEMENT

A radiator element of an antenna system to which


the transmission line is connected.

EFFICIENCY

The ratio of useful output to input power, determined in antenna systems by losses in the system
including losses in nearby objects.

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Antenna Glossary
ELECTRICALLY SMALL ANTENNA

FIELD TUNABLE

Some antennas (such as various low profile antennas, some base loaded whips and often rubber
duckie portable antennas) are physically considerably smaller than either a 1/2 or 1/4 wavelength
antenna. The challenge with electrically small
antennas is to maintain radiating efficiency. A
greater challenge is to design an antenna with adequate bandwidth. Careful design using high quality
materials often overcome these obstacles.

Antennas identified as Field Tunable are shipped


with a cut chart the installer uses to select a
desired operating frequency by tuning the antenna to resonance. Cut charts should be used as
guidelines and are adequately accurate for many
applications. However, Larsen recommends using
appropriate RF measurement devices whenever
possible for more accurate tuning.

ELEVATED FEED

The number of cycles per second of a sound wave

Raises the radiating element above the vehicle roof


level reducing obstruction.

FREQUENCY

FRONT-TO-BACK RATIO

ELEMENT, ELEMENTS

Typically a subset or a more elementary part of a


larger antenna system. For example, an element of
a Yagi-Uda array is normally a dipole antenna that,
together with other dipoles, forms the array. An
8-element Yagi antenna would then ordinarily have
8 dipoles.

EMBEDDED ANTENNAS

Antennas directly integrated into a system such as


an access point, a terminal or a handset. In most
cases, this antenna is matched to the system and
can not be used in other applications without modification.

E-PLANE AND H-PLANE

Antenna measurements in general and radiation


patterns in particular must be performed with
polarization in mind. Since polarization is defined
as having the same orientation as an antennas
electric field vector, it is common practice to refer
to measurements aligned with either the electric
vector ( E-plane) or magnetic vector (H-plane).

The gain of an antenna, in a specified direction.

GAIN

The increase in signal strength that is produced


by an amplifier. The ratio between the amount of
energy propagated from an antenna that is directional compared to the energy from the same
antenna that would be propagated if the antenna
were not directional. The gain of an antenna is the
same regardless of if the antenna is used to transmit or receive.

GIGAHERTZ (GHz)

One billion cycles per second.

GPS

GPS (Global Positioning System) is a radio navigation system allowing land, sea and airborne users
to determine their exact location, velocity, and time
24 hours a day, in all weather conditions, anywhere
in the world.

GROUND PLANE

FIELD STRENGTH

An absolute measure in one direction of the electromagnetic wave field generated by an antenna at
some distance away from the antenna.

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A man-made system of conductors placed below


an antenna to serve as an earth ground

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Antenna Glossary
HALF-WAVE DIPOLE ANTENNA

A center-fed antenna whose electrical length is half


the wavelength of the transmitter or received signal. An antenna consisting of two rods (1/4 wavelength each) in a straight line, that radiates electromagnetic energy.

MOBILE ANTENNA

Refers to any antenna mounted on a vehicle.


Includes a radiating element and a mechanism to
fix the antenna to the vehicle.

MONOPOLE

HELICAL ANTENNA

An antenna with a spiral conductor wound around


a cross section. An antenna that has the form of a
helix.

HERTZ (Hz)

A unit of frequency equal to one cycle per second.

HOTSPOT

Public area where wireless LAN Internet access is


apt to be used (for high-speed access to e-mail,
web sites, etc.). Users are usually unproductive
while waiting. Examples are convention centers,
hotels, airports, train stations, bus stations, restaurants, and coffee shops.

H-PLANE

Antenna measurements in general and radiation


patterns in particular must be performed with
polarization in mind. Since polarization is defined
as having the same orientation as an antennas
electric field vector, it is common practice to refer
to measurements aligned with either the electric
vector ( E-plane) or magnetic vector (H-plane).

IMPEDANCE

The Ohmic value of an antenna feed point, matching section or transmission line at a radio frequency. An impedance may contain a reactance as well
as a resistance component.

MEGAHERTZ (MHz)

1 million cycles per second.

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Literally, one pole, such as a vertical radiator operated against the earth or a ground plane. A handheld rubber duck type of antenna will most likely
be a monopole.

MOUNT

A mount is the device onto which a mobile antenna


attaches. It is the mechanical and electrical interface between an antenna and the vehicle.

MULTI-PATH PROPAGATION

The result of interference from reflections off


surfaces surrounding the antenna. This interference changes the targets return signal strength.
Sometimes it is stronger and sometimes weaker
than expected. The degree of multi-path propagation depends on the type of reflective surface; flat
metal, towers and buildings cause the strongest
effects.

NMO

Perhaps the most prolific of all mobile antenna


mounts is the NMO. It enables one mount, inserted
in a drilled hole in the vehicle body, to be used
over the lifetime of the vehicle with many screw-on
antennas.

NOISE

Any unwanted and unmodulated energy that is


always present to some extent within any signal.

OMNIDIRECTIONAL

An antenna providing a 360-degree transmission


pattern. This type of antenna is used when coverage in all directions is required.

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Antenna Glossary
PCB

Printed Circuit Board.

PENTABAND ANTENNA

An antenna that combines 4-band GSM and


W-CDMA 2100 to receive and transmit signals in
all cellular bands. These antennas can be used in
mobile, machine-to-machine, laptop, automotive,
and all portable device applications for devices
operating on GSM bands (GSM850, EGSM900,
PCN1800, PCS1900) and W-CDMA 2100. They
meet the need for small, high-efficiency, all cellular
band antennas.

QUARTER-WAVE ANTENNA

An antenna with an electrical length that is equal


to one-quarter wavelength of the signal being
transmitter or received. A half-wave antenna cut in
half, with one end grounded.

RADIATION PATTERN

The graphical representation of the relative field


strength radiated from an antenna in a given plane,
plotted against the angular distance from a given
reference.

RADIATOR

PLANAR ARRAY

An antenna in which all of the elements, both


active and parasitic, are in one plane.

A discrete conductor radiating RF energy in an


antenna system.

RADOME

PLENUM-RATED

A term used describe Ethernet cable that has


slow-burning, fire-resistant casing which emits
little smoke. Plenum-rated Ethernet cable is used
in overhead ductwork.

A typically rigid dielectric cover over the radiating


portion of an antenna, and nearly always separated from the radiator by an air gap. A radome
(the merger of radar and dome) has the purpose
of protecting the radiator from natural weather
phenomena and contamination by dirt. It usually
includes aerodynamic shaping to minimize wind
loading.

POINT-TO-POINT

A long-range wireless network between two points.


Point-to-point wireless networks use directional
antennas.

RECEIVER (Rx)

An electronic device which enables a particular signal to be separated from all and converts the signal
format into a format for video, voice or data.

POINT-TO-MULTIPOINT

A communications channel running from one point


to several other points.

POLARIZATION

The sense of the wave radiated by an antenna.


This can be horizontal, vertical, elliptical or circular
(left or right hand circularity) depending on the
design and application.

RELATIVE ANTENNA POWER GAIN

The ratio of the average radiation intensity of the


test antenna to the average radiation of a reference
antenna with all other conditions remaining equal.

REPEATER

A physical device that passes signals from one


transmission medium to another without alteration.

PRINTED ANTENNA

All antennas made by means of a printed circuit


process.
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Antenna Glossary
RoHS

The RoHS Directive stands for the restriction of


the use of certain hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment. This Directive will
ban the placing on the EU market of new electrical
and electronic equipment containing more than
agreed levels of lead, cadmium, mercury, hexavalent chromium, polybrominated biphenyl (PBB)
and polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) flame
retardants from 1July2006.

SHIELD EFFECTIVENESS

A measurement of how well the shielding material


(braid, solid tape, etc.) protects the external environment from radiation produced by the center
conductor.

WAVE LENGTH

See Basic Antenna Concepts.

WHIP

The vertical portion of the antenna assembly acting as the radiator of the radio frequency energy.

YAGI

A directional, gain antenna utilizing one or more


parasitic elements. Named after one of the
Japanese inventors (Yagi and Uda).

STANDARD IMPEDANCE

The nominal impedance associated with the transmission line and test equipment.

STANDING WAVE RATIO (SWR)

See VSWR.

TRANSMISSION LINE

The connecting link allowing the radio frequency


energy generated by the radio to be delivered to
the antenna.

TRANSMITTER

An electronic device consisting of oscillator, modulator and other circuits which produce a radio
electromagnetic wave signal for radiation into the
atmosphere by an antenna.

VOLTAGE STANDING WAVE RATIO (VSWR)

VSWR of the antenna is the ratio of the maximum


to minimum values of voltage in the standing wave
pattern appearing along a lossless 50 Ohms transmission line with an antenna as the load.

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