Antenna Types Reference

Detailed descriptions of common antennas — dipole, monopole, Yagi, patch, dish, helix, log-periodic.

Reference Reference Updated Apr 19, 2026
Reference

Antennas by type

Type Typical gain Pattern Bandwidth Use
Dipole (half-wave) 2.15 dBi Omni (donut) Narrow Reference; amateur radio
Quarter-wave monopole ~5 dBi (over GP) Omni Narrow AM, car radio, whip
5/8-wave monopole ~6 dBi Omni (low angle) Narrow VHF / UHF base
Folded dipole 2.15 dBi Omni Narrow 300 Ω match, TV
Yagi-Uda 6–20 dBi Directional Narrow TV, HAM DX, repeaters
Log-periodic 6–10 dBi Directional Wide (decade) Broadband TV, spectrum analyzers
Patch / microstrip 6–9 dBi Hemispherical Narrow GPS, WiFi, cellular
Helix (axial mode) 8–15 dBi Beam (circular pol.) Narrow Satellite uplink / downlink
Parabolic dish 20–55 dBi Pencil beam Medium Microwave, radar, VSAT
Horn 10–25 dBi Beam Broadband Feed for dish, test
Biquad 10–12 dBi Directional ~15% BW DIY WiFi
Slot ~8 dBi Hemispherical Narrow Flush-mount, aircraft
PIFA / inverted-F 0–3 dBi Near-omni Narrow Phones, IoT
Chip antenna −3 to 2 dBi Varies Narrow BLE, sub-GHz IoT
Fractal / compact 0–5 dBi Varies Multi-band Multi-band handhelds

Polarization notes

  • Vertical: most mobile, FM broadcast, WiFi (orientation varies).
  • Horizontal: classic broadcast TV (US), amateur HF DX.
  • Circular (LHCP / RHCP): GPS, satellite — orientation-independent.
  • Cross-polarized links suffer ~20 dB loss — always match polarization.