Polarization of Man-Made Noise Near the Earth Interference generated by electrical equipment and automobile ignition systems, when observed close to the Earth's surface, is typically:

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: vertically polarized

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Receiving antennas often encounter impulsive man-made noise from power lines, motors, and vehicle ignition. Knowing the usual polarization helps select antenna polarization to reduce interference and improve signal-to-noise ratio.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Observation is near the Earth where many emitters resemble vertical conductors (e.g., wires, leads, vehicle ignition harnesses).
  • Local ground effects favor vertical radiation from such structures.
  • Receiving systems can choose polarization.


Concept / Approach:

Short vertical wires and monopole-like structures predominantly radiate vertical polarization. Many sources of man-made interference near ground approximate vertical current elements; thus, their radiation near the surface is largely vertically polarized. Horizontal polarization is less common for these incidental emitters.


Step-by-Step Solution:

1) Model interference sources as short monopoles (vertical current element).2) Recognize that the electric field is mainly vertical for such sources.3) Conclude that received interference close to Earth tends to be vertically polarized.


Verification / Alternative check:

EM measurements near power lines and vehicle ignition systems consistently show stronger coupling to vertically polarized antennas, validating the practical guidance.


Why Other Options Are Wrong:

Horizontal polarization (A) is not the dominant case for these emitters; “not polarized” (D) ignores the structured geometry; circular (E) is not typical of random switching/ignition noise; option C is incomplete/ambiguous.


Common Pitfalls:

Assuming noise is random in polarization; geometry of conductors sets a preferred polarization.


Final Answer:

vertically polarized

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