U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/242,102 filed on the same date as this application and titled “Conformal Surface Wave Feed”, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
This invention relates to the placement of antennas on vehicles such as aircraft (airplanes, including unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), and airships), land craft (automobiles, trucks, etc.) and sea craft (boats, ships, etc.) that have limited space for mounting antennas and have (or will have) obstructions that will degrade the radiation patterns of conventional antennas.
a shows the fuselage of an aircraft fuselage. It is desirable to mount an antenna on the underside of the fuselage behind the landing gear. However, at least portions of the landing gear (particularly its support strut) block the antenna radiation in the forward direction.
There are many other instances where some element protrudes (or could protrude) from the body of a vehicle which protruding element interferes or obstructs (or could interfere or obstruct) RF reception to and/or transmission from an antenna also on the body of the vehicle. If the vehicle is currently being designed, perhaps it will be possible to move either the antenna or the interfering or obstructing element. Other times, that cannot be done and if the vehicle has already been built it can be very inconvenient to do so, if not impossible to do so. This invention relates to techniques which can be used to mitigate the effects of such elements which otherwise can interfere or obstruct RF reception to and/or transmission from an antenna also on the body of the vehicle. An interfering or obstructing element is generically referred to as a blockage herein.
The prior art includes:
Artificial impedance surface antennas (AISA) are formed from modulated artificial impedance surfaces (AIS). The AIS are typically fabricated using a grounded dielectric topped with a grid of metallic patches. The article by Fong presents a detailed description of the methods used for designing and fabricating linearly and circularly polarized AISAs using scalar and tensor impedance maps, respectively.
In one aspect the present invention provides a method of mitigating adverse transmission and/or reception effects that an obstruction would otherwise have upon a RF signal to be transmitted or received, the RF signal being available at a feed point. The obstruction is spaced from the feed point in a direction of desired transmission or reception. The method includes disposing an artificial impedance surface adjacent the feed point and the obstruction, and tuning or otherwise causing the artificial impedance surface (i) to have a spatially constant impedance function in a constant impedance region at least immediately adjacent the feed point and (ii) to have a spatially non-constant impedance function in one or more regions spaced from the feed point and closer to the obstruction.
In another aspect the present invention provides a method of radiating RF energy available from a feed point disposed on object having a obstruction which would normally interfere with radiation of the RF energy at said feed point, the method including emitting RF energy as surface waves on an artificial impedance surface from said feed point, the artificial impedance surface having a first regions with a first surface impedance function which supports said surface waves moving away from said feed point and having a second region with a second surface impedance function which causes said surface waves to leak or launch off the artificial impedance surface as the radiation of said RF energy away from said artificial impedance surface.
In yet another aspect the present invention provides an apparatus for mitigating an effect of a RF obstruction upon a RF signal emitted by a RF feed point, the apparatus including an artificial impedance surface relative having the RF feed point disposed or adjacent the artificial impedance surface and with the RF obstruction being disposed on or adjacent the artificial impedance surface, the artificial impedance having an essentially spatially constant impedance function in a region of the artificial impedance surface bounded by the RF feed point and the RF obstruction and with a spatially varying impedance function in regions not bounded by the RF feed point and the obstruction.
In still yet another aspect the present invention provides an artificial impedance surface antenna comprising an artificial impedance surface disposed adjacent a structural element which acts as a RF block, the artificial impedance surface having an impedance modulation that routs surface waves released upon the artificial impedance surface around said obstruction and into a radiating region unaffected by the obstruction.
a depicts the fuselage of an aircraft. Antennas mounted on the fuselage underbelly will have their forward-directed radiation blocked by the landing gear strut.
b depicts a model intended to simulate the portion of the aircraft shown in
a is a bottom up view of the ASIA where a conventional antenna has been replaced with a surface-wave feed that feeds a surface wave onto an AIS 10. The AIS 10 has a modulated impedance (indicated by the gray variation) that radiates into a desired radiation pattern. However, the impedance is not modulated until after the surface wave propagates into regions where the gear strut 3 obstruction will not affect the radiated energy.
b depicts how the AIS is preferably enhanced by adding a surface-wave waveguiding region that guides the surface wave around the obstruction and prevents any of the surface wave energy from being attenuated by the obstruction caused by the strut. The surface waves propagate past the obstruction caused by the strut to the radiation region.
a shows a cross section of a model of the nose of an aircraft with a curved line designating the profile of the test version of the curved AIS.
b presents some representative measured radiation patterns for the curved AIS of
a and 7b are graphs which compare simulated radiation patterns given the obstruction with using an AISA to mitigate the obstruction (
a and 8b are representation of flat AISAs. In the case of
a and 9b are graphs of radiation measurements for the AISA with flat AIS as depicted by
c and 9d are graphs of radiation measurements similar to the graph of
a is a plot of radiation patterns at several frequencies in range from 10 GHz to 12.5 GHz for the AIS embodiment with the SWG region.
b shows the peak intensity for the blocked (gear) and unblocked (no gear) cases for the AIS embodiment with the SWG region.
c shows how the peak angle scans with frequency for both the blocked (gear) and unblocked (no gear) cases for the AIS embodiment with the SWG region.
d plots the difference in peak intensity showing that it drops uniformly as the frequency approaches the design frequency of 12 GHz for the AIS embodiment with the SWG region.
a and 11b are representation of curved AISAs. In the case of
a-12d and
As indicated above,
b is representation of a mockup or prototype of the forward portion of the fuselage 1 of an aircraft to test if the AIS 10 of the present invention will mitigate the blockage caused by strut or obstruction 3 in that forward portion. Its design is meant to generically represent the front portion of an aircraft fuselage 1. The depicted elliptical variations 4 pictorially represent a surface-wave impedance modulation that characterizes AIS 10. The shapes of the depicted elliptical variations 4 will depend upon the shape and size of the obstruction 3 as well as its location relative to feed point 2. The variations are dependent on: (1) the desired antenna properties, including radiation angle and frequency, (2) the material properties of the substrate and its thickness, and (3) the period, shape and mean size of the metallic patches that form the AIS. All of this information is included in the equations (1)-(3) below. The elliptical variation and the light and dark bands seen in the figures are formed with metallic patches of varying size. The larger the patch, the higher the surface-wave impedance. The darker bands in the depictions are caused by larger patches on the light underlying dielectric substrate. The results of testing, see
a illustrates conceptually the method the invention uses to mitigate the antenna blockage problem discussed with reference to
Artificial Impedance Surface Antennas (AISA)
Artificial impedance surface antennas (AISA) are realized by launching a surface wave across the AIS 10, whose impedance is spatially modulated across the AIS 10 according a function that matches the phase fronts between the surface wave on the AIS 10 and the desired far-field radiation pattern. The resulting radiation pattern may be a pencil beam whose directivity, angle, beam width and side lobes are determined the details of the AISA geometry and its electrical properties. The AISA is an antenna since it launches electromagnetic radiation from all points on the its surface where there is the impedance modulation. See regions 12 in
It is desirable to direct the radiation pattern from the antenna feed point 2 as close as possible to the plane of the fuselage's bottom, thus overcoming the radiation pattern lift caused by finite and curved ground planes. The approach used is conceptually presented in
The basic principle of AISA operation is to use the grid momentum of the modulated AIS to match the wavevectors between a surface-wave and a plane wave. In the one-dimensional case, the condition on the impedance modulation is
where ko is the radiation's free-space wavenumber at the design frequency, θo is the angle of the desired radiation with respect to the AIS normal, kp=2π/λp is the AIS grid momentum where λp is the AIS modulation period, and ksw=noko is the surface wave's wavenumber, where no is the surface wave's refractive index averaged over the AIS modulation.
The AIS modulation for the one-dimensional AISA radiating at the angle θo and the wavenumber ko can be expressed as periodic variation in the surface-wave propagation index (nsw). In the simplest case, it is sinusoidal.
nsw(x)=no+dn cos(kpx) (Eqn. 2)
where dn is the modulation amplitude. For AISA surfaces of arbitrary shape, the modulation of Eqn. 2 can be generalized as
nsw({right arrow over (r)})=no+dn cos(konor−{right arrow over (k)}o·{right arrow over (r)}). (Eqn. 3)
where {right arrow over (k)}o is the desired radiation wave vector, {right arrow over (r)} is the three-dimensional position vector of the AIS, and r is the distance along the AIS from the surface-wave source to {right arrow over (r)} along a geodesic on the MS surface. For a flat surface, r=√{square root over (x2+y2)}.
Surface-Wave Waveguides
As is discussed above with reference to
The terms surface-wave impedance and surface-wave index are related by a simple formula n=(1+Z2)1/2 where n is the index and Z is the surface wave impedance. A high index corresponds to high impedance, and vice versa. The term impedance herein refers to surface-wave impedance.
A second principle used in blockage mitigation is to locate the radiation aperture 12 so that it is not affected by the obstruction 3. This is illustrated in
The shape and impedance-profile of the SWG region 14 was chosen as one way of demonstrating its effect on improving AISA blockage mitigation. The results show that its effects are beneficial and it is advantageous to explore and optimize such structures, especially to optimize it for specific AISA platform applications and geometries of the feed point 2, the obstruction 3 and the shape of the surface between them. So while the triangular shape depicted for region 14 is clearly beneficial, other shapes for region 14 may yield further improvement or modifying the depicted triangular shape of region 14 may yield further improvement.
Simulation of Blockage Mitigation
Simulations were used to demonstrate the ability of the SWG techniques outlined above to mitigate antenna blockage.
Measurements of Blockage Mitigation
AISA technology for blockage mitigation was characterized with measurements of flat and curved AISAs with and without the low-impedance SWG region 15. The radiation patterns were measured with and without a metal structure emulating the landing gear strut 3 seen in
The flat AISAs, with (see
The flat AIS 10 depicted in
For comparison,
The effectiveness of the AIS 10 embodiment with the SWG region 15 is consistent across the frequency range where the intensity drops off by several dB. Radiation patterns at several frequencies in this range are plotted in
Measurements of Curved AISAs
Similar results (see
One significant item to note in comparing the patterns from the waveguide feed on the flat metal plates and the curved metal plate (
The radiation patterns of the curved AIS 10 with SWG region 15 at several frequencies are plotted in
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that this disclosure is based on analysis and modeling of techniques which can doubtlessly be applied in actual, full scale applications, such as real life embodiments of the aircraft 1 modeled herein.
This technology can be applied in many other applications. The obstruction 3 for the UAV is a fixed blockage, but this technology can also be applied to movable obstructions or objects which change shape or configuration. The spatial surface-wave impedance function 4 that characterizes the AIS 10 can be permanently designed into the AIS 10 so that it does not change or it can be variable using suitable control signals which control variable capacitors imbedded in or disposed on the AIS 10 for the purpose of controlling its spatial surface-wave impedance function. Those control signals can vary the surface-wave impedance function 4 as a function of how the obstruction 3 changes shape and/position relative to the feed point 2.
This technology can be used to overcome objects, whatever they might be, which block, obstruct, interfere with or hinder the transmission and/or reception of RF signals available at or supplied to a feed point. Most objects of the types mentioned herein will just interfere with the transmission and/or reception of RF signal and not completely block those signals. It is to be understood that the terms ‘blockage’ and ‘obstruction’ used herein are intended to embrace the notion that the blockage or obstruction interferes with or hinters the transmission and/or reception of RF signals available at or supplied to a feed point without necessarily completely blocking such transmission and/or reception.
The shape of the antenna does not have to conform to the shape of the aircraft, vehicle or object with which it is associated or mounted upon. The fact that it can be made to conform is believed to be desirable in many applications and/or uses, but an optional feature which need not be utilized.
Having described the invention in connection with certain embodiments thereof, modification will now suggest itself to those skilled in the art. For example, the disclosed embodiment preferably conforms to a frontal portion of an aircraft and is used to circumvent RF blockage caused by a strut. But those skilled in the art will appreciate the fact that the disclosed antenna may conform to the shape of a portion of any aircraft, vehicle or object and moreover the fact that disclosed antenna does not need to conform to the shape of any any aircraft, vehicle or object to which it might be attached or otherwise associated, and still be used successfully to circumvent a RF blockage caused by some interfering or obstructing element. As such, the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiments except as is specifically required by the appended claims.
This invention was made under US Government contract No. W15P7T-06-9-P011 and therefore the US Government may have certain rights in and to this invention.
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