This invention relates to antennas suited for use by aircraft or satellites for communications where a wide coverage conical beam is desired without the use of movable elements or electronic beam steering.
A variety of antennas have been designed for use at gigahertz frequencies. One such antenna design has a short back-fire cup-dipole driven element disposed a distance away from a center vertex of a concave cone shaped reflector. This antenna design utilizes a balun to match the driven element with a coaxial feed. The balun may be complicated to manufacture at such frequencies and provides matching characteristics that vary with temperature variations. Such an antenna is not capable of providing dual band operation where the two bands are separated by a substantial frequency difference, e.g. 20 GHz band and 45 GHz. Another antenna design is a conical helix antenna extending perpendicular from a planar reflector that provides limited bandwidth coverage and is likewise not capable of providing such dual band operation.
There exists a need for a single antenna that can provide a wide coverage conical beam and operate over two widely separated frequency bands.
It is an object of the present invention to satisfy this need.
An exemplary embodiment of an antenna in accordance with the present invention utilizes a sub-reflector and a main reflector. The antenna cooperates with a signal transmission feed disposed at the center of the antenna axis between the first and main reflectors to emit radio signals towards the sub-reflector. The sub-reflector reflects radio waves towards a main reflector which in turn reflects the radio waves to form the beam pattern emitted by the antenna. The reflecting surface of the sub-reflector is formed by a portion of an axially-displaced ellipse rotated about the antenna axis. The reflecting surface of the main reflector is defined by a section of a parabola rotated about the antenna axis to form a reflecting surface that concavely slopes away from the antenna axis. An embodiment of the antenna provides a wide coverage conical beam with selectable beam peaks that operate over more than 2.25:1 bandwidth ratio (defined as the ratio of the highest frequency of the high band to the lowest frequency of the low band) and provides substantially iso-flux beam density on the ground. The beam peak locations for the conically shaped beam can be extended up to 90 degrees from the antenna boresight axis to enable wide area coverage surveillance for the aircraft.
Features of exemplary implementations of the invention will become apparent from the description, the claims, and the accompanying drawings in which:
The exemplary antenna design is explained in terms of transmit mode, however reciprocity applies so the antenna also functions to receive signals. Signals being received by the antenna are carried by radio waves impinging on the antenna as opposed to signals being radiated from the antenna. Even though the antenna itself is capable of both transmitting and receiving signals, the feed system for the antenna must also be capable of transmitting and receiving signals in corresponding frequency bands in order to deliver the signals to the antenna to be radiated and to couple signals received from the antenna to detectors for the extraction of the encoded information.
A main reflector 414 is formed by a perpendicular rotation about the y-axis of a portion of a parabola extending from the origin (point 404) to point 416. The parabola, which is within a plane that also includes the y-axis, is defined by a focal point 418, vertex 420 and an axis of symmetry 422. The parabola has a focal length of 12.5 inches between the focal point 418 and the vertex 420. The vertex 420 is disposed such that it would lie on an extension of the arc of the parabola defining the main reflector 414 beyond the origin. The axis of symmetry 422 forms an angle of 35° relative to the y-axis. One definition of a parabola is the locus of points in a plane that are equidistant from a directrix (a straight line) and a focus point, with the locus of points being symmetrical about an axis of symmetry. The directrix for the subject parabola would be a straight line perpendicular to the axis of symmetry located 12.5 inches from the vertex 420 and 25 inches from the focal point 418. The portion of the parabola to be rotated about the y-axis extends from the origin 403 to point 416 that has an x-axis value of −4.6 inches.
The geometries and dimensions described in the above table can be altered to achieve symmetrical beam peaks anywhere between 0° and 90°. Further, the above described antennas for operation at the 20 GHz and 45 GHz bands also operate effectively at 10 GHz to provide similar beam peaks and iso-flux patterns. The described antenna can thus operate over a bandwidth ratio of 2.25, defined by the highest frequency divided by the lowest frequency, e.g. 45/20; or a bandwidth ratio of 4.5 considering operation at 45 GHz and 10 GHz. Although the antenna itself supports this wide conical beam coverage for such frequencies, it will be understood that the signal transmission feed must also accommodate operation in frequency bands of operation.
The below equations define the geometries for antennas having desired beam peaks.
For the main reflector (parabolid)
where f1=12.5″, a=1.7, b=0.8, θ0=35° for 62.5° beam, and f1=25.0″, a=1.5, b=1.2, θ0=85° for 90° beam
For the subreflector (ellipsoid)
where α=1.5, β=1.7, θ=25° for both 90° and 62.5° beam.
In the above equations, a represents amount of x directional shift of parabola from the origin, b represents amount of y directional shift of parabola from the origin, θ0 represents the angle formed by the axis of the parabola relative to the antenna axis, α represents horizontal radius of ellipse, β represents vertical radius of ellipse, and θ1 represents the angle formed by the major axis of the ellipse relative to the antenna axis.
In general, the feed network to the right of the matching section 904 separates the 20 GHz transmit band and 45 GHz receive band with sufficient isolation, preferably more than 60 dB, and converts between linear polarization and circular polarization. The waveguide junction 906 has six ports: one common port connected to the matching section 904; one port to couple 45 GHz signals to the receiver high pass filter 908; and four ports coupled to accept 20 GHz transmit signals from low pass filters 916, 918, 920, 922. The receiver high pass filter 908 may comprise a smaller cross-section waveguide which passes the high-frequency 45 GHz signals and cuts-off the low-frequency 20 GHz signals. By selecting the length of the smaller waveguide used for filter 908, the 20 GHz signals can be isolated by 60 dB or more. The received septum polarizer 910 converts the linearly polarized signals into two circular polarized orthogonal signals (LHCP and RHCP) that are delivered respectively to the receiver right circular polarized port 912 and the receiver left circular polarized port 914. If only a single sense of circular polarization is to be utilized, one of these ports could be terminated to RF load which could be internal to the polarizer 910. Appropriate signal decoding equipment can be coupled to ports 912 and 914 to recover information encoded on the signals.
The four ports of waveguide junction 906 coupled to the transmit low pass filters are 90° apart circumferentially. These ports are designed to allow the passage of 20 GHz transmit signals while rejecting 45 GHz receive signals, preferably by 60 dB or more. Transmit filters 916, 918 are disposed at ports of the transmit junction 924 that are 0° and 180°, or at 90° and 270°, while the other transmit filters 920, 922 are disposed at the other orthogonal set of ports of the transmit junction 924 (These ports may be also be alternatively connected through an H-plane tee that can be combined with a short-slot 90° hybrid coupler which combines two orthogonal linear polarized signals with equal amplitude and with 90° phase quadrature to generate circular polarized signals). Transmit septum polarizer 926 accepts right circular polarized signals at port 928 and left circular polarized signals at port 930 and couples the signals to the four orthogonal ports of the transmit junction 924. Preferably, all of the feed assembly uses waveguide components in order to minimize insertion loss.
The feed assembly described above is merely representative of one dual band implementation. The exemplary antenna in accordance with the present invention is most effective with an evenly distributed conically feed but is not dependent on a particular feed assembly. The antenna also effectively supports communications in the 20 GHz/30 GHz bands associated with communications with a Wideband Global SATCOM (WGS) satellite. Alternatively, the antenna is capable of supporting communications in the 20 GHz/30 GHz/45 GHz bands with a feed assembly that likewise supports such communications. Reference can be made to U.S. Pat. No. 7,737,904, “ANTENNA SYSTEMS FOR MULTIPLE FREQUENCY BANDS” for additional information about horn antenna design that supports multiple frequency bands of operation; this document is incorporated herein by reference.
Although exemplary implementations of the invention have been depicted and described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications, additions, substitutions, and the like can be made without departing from the spirit of the invention.
The scope of the invention is defined in the following claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20150084821 A1 | Mar 2015 | US |