This application claims priority to foreign French patent application No. FR 1201170, filed on Apr. 20, 2012, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to a mobile directional plane antenna able to switch its polarization by displacement of radiating panels. It applies notably to the switching of antennas embedded onboard moving objects on the ground having to operate high-speed communications with a satellite, in particular a geostationary satellite.
In order to provide for communications between a fixed point, for example a geostationary satellite, and a moving point, for example a vehicle on the ground, an antenna making it possible to hunt down the fixed point is disposed at the level of the moving object. The constraints to be adhered to by this antenna are severe. Notably, it must be configured so as not to emit in other directions signals with a power density greater than a regulated level, so as not to disturb the service provided for by adjacent satellites. A relatively high precision in the tracking of the satellite must therefore be guaranteed with this type of antenna. By way of example, for coverage of the European continent, the reflector of an antenna on the ground (or on an airborne carrier) must be able to be oriented in relation to an interval of angles lying between about 10° in elevation for Spain and 60° for northern Europe, the reflector being 360° orientable in relation to the azimuth angle. The reflector, with a diameter of about 60 to 70 cm, must thus benefit from a considerable freedom of movement and from a reliable and precise control system, thus leading to bulky and expensive antennas. Moreover, when the polarization of the signals is linear—if for example the satellite comprises an antenna with a single source of signals—, the ground antenna must be constantly aligned with the direction of polarization.
In order to lessen the constraints to be satisfied by ground antennas and thus simplify their production, circular polarization may be employed in place of the aforementioned linear polarization, for example in the Ka band. By way of illustration, the frequency band lying between 19.7 GHz and 20.2 GHz can serve in reception at the satellite level, while the band lying between 29.5 GHz and 30 GHz may be used in emission, coverage being provided for by a set of adjacent spots in right or left circular polarization.
Multibeam satellites cover a territory with a plurality of spots configured in such a way that the signals emitted on two neighbouring spots do not interfere. In addition, the coverage of a satellite comprises spots having various transmission frequencies and/or various polarizations, two neighbouring spots being configured so as not to have, at one and the same time, the same polarization and the same transmission frequency. The frequency characteristics and polarization characteristics of the signals emitted on a spot are generally designated by the expression “spot colour”, two neighbouring spots therefore having distinct colours. By way of illustration, with two different polarizations and two different transmission frequencies, four colours of spots may be created.
Antennas onboard mobile craft required to provide for communication with a satellite sometimes cross a boundary between two spots. This is the case, for example, with antennas intended to provide an Internet connection from an aircraft or a train. When the antenna leaves the zone covered by a first spot configured with a first polarization (for example right circular) and enters the zone covered by a second spot configured with a second polarization (left circular), the antenna must switch rapidly so as to modify its emission and/or reception polarization. Furthermore, the radiating elements of a beamforming antenna must be sufficiently close together to avoid the formation of lateral radiation lobes, liable to perturb adjacent communication systems.
A publication by Kwang-Seop Son et al., published in 2006 in “Proceedings of Asia-Pacific Microwave conference” under the title “Waveguide Slot Array In-Motion Antenna for Receiving both RHCP and LHCP using Single Layer Polarizer”, discloses an antenna structure comprising sources of signals exciting polarizers aligned on a film. The polarizers are arranged alternately in opposite directions and the sources are separated from the film of polarizers by a radiofrequency-insulating layer provided with a series of cavities placed facing the polarizers in such a way that at a given instant, one polarizer out of two is illuminated by a source. The film may be actuated in translation so that the cavities are placed facing the polarizers which were not previously illuminated. These polarizers being oriented in a different direction from the first polarizers, the polarization of the signals emitted by the antenna is reversed. This antenna therefore makes it possible to carry out a switching between two different polarizations. However, it comprises drawbacks. Indeed, its structure imposes a relatively large distance between the radiating elements, thereby giving rise to overly sizable lateral lobes in the radiation pattern.
The European Patent Application published under the number EP1107019 discloses a radar comprising two antennas mounted back-to-back and fed by different emission sources. The feeding of each antenna is switched as a function of the scanning movement performed. This arrangement allows the radar to increase its scan field. However, the proposed structure is not adapted to the tracking of pointing.
An aim of the invention is to propose a compact directional antenna, able to switch its polarization and whose manufacturing complexity is moderate. For this purpose, the subject of the invention is a tracking antenna with polarization switching comprising a support comprising at least two faces each supporting a plurality of waveguides fed with radiofrequency signals and pierced with apertures disposed so as to illuminate radiating elements placed some distance from the said apertures, characterized in that for at least one given antenna pointing, the said support is able to toggle between at least two different configurations, the said support being configured so as to place, in the second configuration, the second face in a position identical to that taken by the first face in the first configuration, several radiating elements of the first face being, in the said position, oriented differently from radiating elements of the second face.
The expression tracking antenna is understood to mean an antenna able to maintain its pointing at a given target (for example a satellite), by compensating for the movements of the craft on which it is installed. The antenna according to the invention thus makes it possible to switch its polarization whilst keeping it pointing at the same target.
According to one embodiment of the antenna according to the invention, the support is fixed on a swivel axis suitable for toggling between the two configurations by rotation.
The swivel axis may be configured so that the respective positions of the first and of the second face of the support are mutually substituted after rotation of the support by half a revolution about the said axis.
Advantageously, the swivel axis is parallel to each of the faces.
The swivel axis, termed the first swivel axis, may be mounted on a second swivel axis orthogonal to the said first swivel axis. According to a first embodiment, the first axis makes it possible to orient the antenna in elevation, the second axis making it possible to orient the antenna in azimuth. According to another embodiment, the first axis makes it possible to orient the antenna in azimuth, the second axis making it possible to orient the antenna in elevation.
Advantageously, the radiating elements are dipoles. Moreover, the dipoles of one and the same face may all be oriented in the same direction.
According to one embodiment of the antenna according to the invention, the first face comprises a number of radiating elements equal to the number of radiating elements present on the second face, the radiating elements being disposed on each of the faces so that to each radiating element of the first face there corresponds a radiating element of the second face whose barycentre in the second configuration is identical to the barycentre of the corresponding radiating element of the first face when it is in the first configuration.
According to one embodiment of the antenna according to the invention, the waveguides are guides with rectangular cross-section, the apertures being distributed, for each of the waveguides, on a face of the said waveguide alternately on either side of its longitudinal median axis.
According to one embodiment of the antenna according to the invention, for two adjacent apertures of a waveguide, a radiating element is placed above each of the apertures.
Other characteristics will become apparent on reading the detailed description which follows by way of nonlimiting example, given in relation to appended drawings which represent:
a and 1b, basic diagrams illustrating the antenna according to the invention in, respectively, two different configurations;
a and 1b illustrate by basic diagrams the antenna according to the invention. The antenna 100 is viewed from above. Each of the waveguides 101, 102, 103 is fed with radiofrequency signals 101a, 102a 103a and extends parallel to the Y axis. The waveguides may be guides with rectangular cross-section. Each waveguide 101, 102, 103 is regularly drilled with apertures 110 in the form of rectangular slots preferably parallel to the waveguide. By way of example, the antenna occupies an area of about 6 cm×6 cm.
A radiating element 120 in the form of a dipole is placed above each aperture 110, in a plane parallel to the plane in which the apertures 110 are made. The plane in which the dipoles are placed is advantageously situated at a distance equal to a value chosen between a fifth and a quarter of the wavelength of the signals transmitted in the waveguides, in order to produce such a perturbation on the field coming from the aperture so that two orthogonal field components, equal in magnitude and out of phase by 90 degrees, i.e. a circularly polarized field, are obtained. The choice of the distance causes a phase difference of 90 degrees. The dipoles 120 form, viewed from above, a nonzero and non-perpendicular angle with the apertures 110 formed in the waveguide 101, 102, 103.
The antenna according to the invention can take at least two configurations.
Each panel 202, 203, is fixed about a first swivel axis 204 making it possible to adjust the orientation of the panels according to the angle of elevation. This first axis 204 is mounted on mobile arms 206 which can move about a second swivel axis 208, by virtue of a vertical pivot 209 making it possible to adjust the orientation of the panels 202, 203 according to the azimuth angle. According to another embodiment, an intermediate third axis is mounted so as to avoid blind zones in the limit of swing of one of the two axes 204, 208 and thus allow the antenna to easily cover the celestial space.
The panels 202, 203 may be rotated on the basis of drive means included in the arms 206, and may be controlled so as to perform at least one complete half-revolution, so as to switch the positions of the two faces 202a, 202b, 203a, 203b of each of the panels 202, 203. The arms 206 are thus made sufficiently long to allow the panels 202, 203 to invert their position without hitting the elements 207 effecting the junction between the arms 206 and the pivot 209.
In the example, these waveguides 233 are of rectangular cross-section and are drilled in their upper part (that is to say the face situated away from the rigid framework 231), so as to form slots. Advantageously, the slots are oriented in parallel to one another and in the longitudinal direction of the waveguides 233, as illustrated previously in
A layer 235 of material transparent to radiofrequency waves is placed above the waveguides 233 so as to support a plurality of dipoles 237. Advantageously, the dipoles 237 are placed facing the slots formed in the waveguides 233, so as to ensure good transmission to the waveguides of a signal received by the antenna or effective radiation by the dipoles 237 of a signal transmitted by these waveguides 233.
Thus, when the panel is rotated so as to perform half a revolution, the face which was in the inactive position (turned towards the rear of the antenna) replaces the face which was in the active position, stated otherwise, that which was turned towards the front of the antenna. The antenna replaces a radiating face, which was oriented according to a determined elevation angle and a determined azimuth angle, by a radiating face in the same position but having differently oriented dipoles. The polarization of the active face is thus modified by a simple rotation of the antenna panel.
The dipoles may be placed on the faces 401, 402 so that whichever face is in the active configuration, the placements of the centres of gravity of the dipoles on this active face are the same.
According to the configuration of the support arms 206 for the antenna panels, the change-of-polarization rotation is performed about the axis 204 for adjusting the angle of elevation, as shown by
In the example illustrated in
The examples presented in this text comprise dual-face panels, but other embodiments comprising supports provided with three, or indeed more faces could be implemented. For example, a support having a structure of triangular prism shape, the first swivel axis 204 of the antenna passing longitudinally at the centre of the prism, makes it possible to place three radiating faces provided with dipoles oriented differently from one face to the other for the two first faces and a dipole-less third face and thus to propose three different configurations of polarization.
The first feed circuit is described, the second being symmetrically identical in the exemplary embodiment. The first feed circuit comprises feed waveguides 251 configured to feed slotted guides 256a, 256b, 256c, 256d, which in the example are four slotted guides orthogonal to the radiation waveguides 233 (cf.
To summarize, a face of a panel therefore comprises successively, going from the core of the panel towards the exterior of this panel:
The antenna according to the invention furthermore comprises a switch 254 making it possible to effect the linkup between the waveguides for transmitting the signals to the front-end and the feed waveguides 251, 252 of the panel 202. During polarization switching, the switch 254 fixed for example within the rigid framework 231 makes it possible to select one or the other of the feed circuits 251, 252. Thus, for example, if the first face 202a is in the active position and the second face in the inactive position 202b, the switch 254 is configured so as to transmit to the front-end the signals picked up on the first face 202a. When polarization switching is triggered, the panel 202 is rotated half a revolution, this taking, for example, a second or a few seconds. Concomitantly, the switch 254 connects the front-end circuit of the antenna on the new active face, that is to say the second face 202b.
An advantage of the antenna according to the invention is that it does not impose any distance between the slots formed in the waveguides, thereby making it possible to densify the array of radiating elements and thus to obtain a directional radiation pattern. Furthermore, its manufacturing principle is simple and makes it possible to modify the orientation of all the dipoles by way of a common motion (in the example, a rotation of the panel), thereby avoiding discrepancies of adjustment of orientation between the dipoles. It makes it possible to effect cheaper polarization switching, avoiding complex mechanisms effecting distinct switchings by dipoles or groups of dipoles.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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12 01170 | Apr 2012 | FR | national |