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direktionale

Direktionale is a German term used in technical contexts to describe devices, responses, or systems that exhibit directionality, meaning they respond more strongly to signals coming from certain directions than from others. The concept applies across disciplines such as acoustics, optics, telecommunications, radar, and navigation. In practice, direktionale devices aim to improve signal quality by enhancing desired signals while suppressing interference or noise from unwanted directions.

In acoustics, a direktionale, or directional, microphone collects sound predominantly from a chosen orientation, reducing ambient

Directionality can be achieved through physical design, such as shaped housings, arrays of sensors, or reflector

The term direktionale thus denotes a broad principle: focusing sensitivity or emission along preferred directions to

noise
and
reverberation
from
the
sides
and
rear.
In
radio
and
wireless
communications,
direktionale
antennas
concentrate
transmission
and
reception
in
specific
directions,
increasing
gain
and
range
while
limiting
reception
from
other
directions.
Directionality
is
often
described
by
a
polar
pattern
or
beam
pattern
and
is
quantified
by
measures
such
as
directivity,
polar
plots,
and,
for
microphones,
patterns
like
cardioid
or
supercardioid.
elements,
as
well
as
through
digital
signal
processing
and
beamforming,
which
steer
and
shape
the
effective
reception
or
transmission
pattern.
Applications
include
conferencing
systems,
hearing
aids,
mobile
networks,
radar
and
sonar,
satellite
communications,
and
optical
sensors.
improve
performance,
coverage,
and
interference
rejection,
with
various
implementations
tuned
to
specific
frequency
ranges
and
use
cases.