Any node of a circuit that is available for connection to an external circuit is called a pole (or
terminal if it is a physical object). The port condition is that a pair of poles of a circuit is considered a port
if and only if the current flowing into one pole from outside the circuit is equal to the current flowing out of the other pole into the external circuit. Equivalently, the
algebraic sum of the currents flowing into the two poles from the external circuit must be zero. It cannot be determined if a pair of nodes meets the port condition by analysing the internal properties of the circuit itself. The port condition is dependent entirely on the external connections of the circuit. What are ports under one set of external circumstances may well not be ports under another. Consider the circuit of four resistors in the figure for example. If
generators are connected to the pole pairs (1, 2) and (3, 4) then those two pairs are ports and the circuit is a
box attenuator. On the other hand, if generators are connected to pole pairs (1, 4) and (2, 3) then those pairs are ports, the pairs (1, 2) and (3, 4) are no longer ports, and the circuit is a
bridge circuit. It is even possible to arrange the inputs so that
no pair of poles meets the port condition. However, it is possible to deal with such a circuit by splitting one or more poles into a number of separate poles joined to the same node. If only one external
generator terminal is connected to each pole (whether a split pole or otherwise) then the circuit can again be analysed in terms of ports. The most common arrangement of this type is to designate one pole of an
n-pole circuit as the common and split it into
n−1 poles. This latter form is especially useful for
unbalanced circuit topologies and the resulting circuit has
n−1 ports. In the most general case, it is possible to have a generator connected to every pair of poles, that is,
nC2 generators, then every pole must be split into
n−1 poles. For instance, in the figure example (c), if the poles 2 and 4 are each split into two poles each then the circuit can be described as a 3-port. However, it is also possible to connect generators to pole pairs , , and making generators in all and the circuit has to be treated as a 6-port. ==One-ports==