In a Nutshell

In outdoor wireless engineering, seeing the far end of a link is only half the battle. Radio waves do not travel in a straight line; they occupy a 3D ellipsoidal space between the two points. If this space—the Fresnel Zone—is obstructed, the signal will reflect and phase-cancel, destroying link throughput even with a visual Line of Sight.

The Ellipsoid of Energy

Named after physicist Augustin-Jean Fresnel, these 'zones' represent areas where the electromagnetic waves are in-phase. The First Fresnel Zone is where the majority of the energy is transmitted.

Fresnel Zone Clearance Simulator

Line of Sight vs. Electromagnetic Obstruction

LINK OPTIMAL
CLEARANCE: 117%
A-ENDB-END1st FRESNEL ZONE
HEIGHT

Engineering Logic: The First Fresnel Zone contains 90% of the energy. Even if you have a perfect "Visual Line of Sight", any object entering the zone (above the 60% line) will cause multipath cancellation. The signal reflects off the obstruction and reaches the receiver out of phase, canceling out the original signal.

Line of Sight (LoS) vs. Fresnel Clearance

There are three types of Line of Sight:

  1. Visual LoS: You can see the other antenna.
  2. Near LoS: You can see it, but objects are close to the path.
  3. Radio LoS: The 1st Fresnel zone is 60-80% clear.

Curvature of the Earth

For long-distance links (over 10-15 km), the Earth's curvature itself becomes an obstruction in the Fresnel zone. To compensate, antennas must be mounted higher than a simple straight-line calculation would suggest.

Conclusion

Never trust your eyes when designing a wireless link. Trust the math. If your Fresnel zone isn't clear, your bridge will fail.

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Technical Standards & References

REF [1]
John S. Seybold (2005)
Introduction to RF Propagation
Published: Wiley
VIEW OFFICIAL SOURCE
REF [2]
Ubiquiti Networks (2022)
Guidelines for Fixed Wireless Point-to-Point Links
Published: Engineering Blog
VIEW OFFICIAL SOURCE
Mathematical models derived from standard engineering protocols. Not for human safety critical systems without redundant validation.

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