A high-gain patch antenna is a directional antenna that concentrates RF energy into a defined coverage area rather than radiating equally in all directions. Cisco’s Wireless RF Reference Guide explains that antenna gain determines how RF power is radiated and that higher-gain antennas do not create additional transmit power; they focus existing power in a given direction. Cisco also distinguishes omnidirectional high-gain patterns, which flatten coverage, from directional antennas, which focus energy toward a target area.
That makes option C correct: a patch antenna imparts a focused beam, typically useful for covering a hallway, warehouse aisle, seating section, point-to-point link, or defined flat service area. Cisco’s antenna documentation also states that higher-gain antennas provide longer coverage distance but with a coverage-area tradeoff, especially in a particular direction. Option A is incorrect because antenna gain does not restrict operation to a single narrow frequency; frequency support is determined by antenna design and radio band. Option B describes channel overlap, not antenna behavior. Option D does not describe a standard patch antenna radiation pattern. Reference topics:RF Fundamentals — antenna gain, directional antennas, patch antenna radiation patterns, beamwidth, and coverage-cell design.
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