Claims
- 1. A common aperture dual polarization antenna array comprising:
- an antenna aperture;
- a plurality of centered slot arrays positioned within said antenna aperture;
- a plurality of notch dipole arrays positioned within said antenna aperture and positioned substantially orthogonal to said plurality of centered slot arrays;
- a first feed guide coupled to said plurality of centered slot arrays; and
- a second feed guide coupled to said plurality of notch dipole arrays.
- 2. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 1 wherein said plurality of centered slot arrays includes a plurality of rectangular waveguides, each of said rectangular waveguides including a plurality of centered slots, said plurality of centered slots substantially centered between adjacent notch dipole arrays.
- 3. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 2 wherein said centered shunt slots are fed by offset resonant ridge irises.
- 4. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 1 wherein said plurality of centered slot arrays excite TEM even mode without exciting TM.sub.01 odd mode.
- 5. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 1 wherein said plurality of notch dipole arrays includes a plurality of notch radiators and a plurality of dipole radiators.
- 6. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 1 further comprising a polarization selective ground plane having a plurality of conductors extending substantially parallel to one another and substantially orthogonal to said plurality of notch dipole arrays, said polarization selective ground plane acting as a ground plane for said plurality of notch dipole arrays and being substantially transparent to said plurality of centered slot arrays.
- 7. A common aperture dual polarization antenna array comprising:
- a principle polarization array having a plurality of principle polarized radiators operable to radiate principle polarized energy;
- a cross polarization array having a plurality of cross polarized radiators operable to radiate cross polarized energy; and
- a polarization selective ground plane operable to simultaneously reflect substantially all of the cross polarized energy radiated from said plurality of cross polarized radiators and simultaneously pass substantially all of the principle polarized energy radiated from said plurality of principle polarized radiators.
- 8. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 7 wherein said principle polarization array includes a plurality of rectangular waveguide fed longitudinal centered shunt slot arrays and said plurality of principle polarized radiators include a plurality of centered shunt slots.
- 9. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 8 wherein each centered shunt slot is fed by an offset ridge resonant iris.
- 10. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 7 wherein said cross polarization array includes a plurality of stripline fed notch dipole arrays and said plurality of cross polarized radiators include a plurality of notch radiators and dipole radiators.
- 11. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 10 wherein each notch dipole array is fed with a stripline feed circuitry having a probe coupling element.
- 12. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 11 wherein each probe coupling element is fed by a rectangular feed guide having tapered walls at each probe coupling element location to provide inductive tuning.
- 13. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 7 wherein said polarization selective ground plane includes a plurality of conductive strips positioned substantially parallel with one another.
- 14. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 13 wherein said polarization selective ground plane is positioned at about one-quarter wavelength (1/4.lambda.) below said cross polarization array.
- 15. A common aperture dual polarization antenna array comprising:
- a plurality of rectangular waveguide fed centered shunt slot arrays, each of said centered shunt slot arrays including a rectangular waveguide and a plurality of centered shunt slots;
- a plurality of stripline fed notch dipole arrays, each of said notch dipole arrays including a plurality of notch radiators and a plurality of dipole radiators; and
- wherein said plurality of centered shunt slot arrays and said plurality of notch dipole arrays share a common aperture.
- 16. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 15 further comprising a polarization selective ground plane operable to simultaneously reflect substantially all energy radiated from said plurality of notch dipole arrays and simultaneously pass substantially all energy radiated from said plurality of centered shunt slot arrays.
- 17. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 16 wherein said polarization selective ground plane is positioned about one-quarter wavelength (1/4.lambda.) below said plurality of notch dipole arrays.
- 18. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 15 wherein each of said centered shunt slots is fed by an offset ridge resonant iris.
- 19. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 18 wherein each of said offset ridge resonant irises includes a first iris element and a second iris element separated from one another and substantially centered below each of said centered shunt slots.
- 20. The common aperture dual polarization antenna array as defined in claim 15 wherein each of said notch dipole arrays is fed by stripline feed circuitry, each stripline feed circuitry including a probe coupling element, each probe coupling element extending into a feed guide, wherein said feed guide includes inductive tuning at each probe coupling element.
Government Interests
This invention was developed in whole or in part with U.S. Government funding. Accordingly, the U.S. Government may have rights in this invention.
US Referenced Citations (5)