1. Field of the Invention
The present invention generally relates to reflector antennas, and more particularly relates to a method and apparatus that reduce the effects of collector surface blockage in reflector antennas while increasing antenna gain and efficiency.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Parabolic antennas have been used for many years as an inexpensive fixed beam antenna in both transmit and receive applications.
Center-feed parabolic antennas 10 work very well in such applications. However, when sidelobe reduction is either desired or required, performance of this type of reflector antenna is limited by blockage of its collector surface 12 by its antenna feed structure 14. This blockage causes discontinuities in the illumination of the parabolic collector surface 12, which are manifested by an increase in undesirable sidelobe levels.
Therefore, there is an obvious need for a method of reducing the effects of collector surface blockage by feed structures and/or subreflectors in all types of reflector antennas.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a method and apparatus for achieving substantially ideal performance characteristics from a reflector antenna.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a method and apparatus for increasing antenna gain and efficiency, as well as reducing sidelobe levels of a reflector antenna.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide a method and apparatus for eliminating the effects of collector surface blockage by a feed mechanism or subreflector in a reflector antenna.
A method of reducing blockage in a reflector antenna in accordance with one form of the present invention, which incorporates some of the preferred features, includes disposing at least a portion of a feed mechanism in front of a first reflector and disposing at least a portion of a second reflector in front of the feed mechanism. The feed mechanism is adapted to receive or transmit energy. At least a portion of the second reflector is adapted to permit energy to pass therethrough. The energy passing through the second reflector would otherwise have been blocked from being received or transmitted by the first reflector.
A reflector antenna formed in accordance with another form of the present invention, which incorporates some of the preferred features, includes a first reflector, a feed mechanism, and a second reflector. At least a portion of the feed mechanism is disposed in front of the first reflector and adapted to receive or transmit energy. At least a portion of the second reflector is disposed in front of the feed mechanism. At least a portion of the second reflector is adapted to permit energy to pass therethrough, which would otherwise have been blocked from being received or transmitted by the first reflector.
A method of reducing blockage in a reflector antenna in accordance with yet another form of the present invention, which incorporates some of the preferred features, includes disposing at least a portion of a first feed mechanism in front of a first reflector and disposing at least a portion of a second antenna in front of the first feed mechanism. At least a portion of the first feed mechanism blocks energy from being received or transmitted by the first reflector. The first feed mechanism is adapted to receive or transmit energy. The second antenna is adapted to receive or transmit at least a portion of the energy blocked by the first feed mechanism.
A reflector antenna formed in accordance with still another form of the present invention, which incorporates some of the preferred features, includes a first reflector, a first feed mechanism, and a second antenna. The first reflector is adapted to receive or transmit energy. At least a portion of the first feed mechanism is disposed in front of the first reflector. At least a portion of the first feed mechanism blocks energy from being received or transmitted by the first reflector. The first feed mechanism is adapted to receive or transmit energy. At least a portion of the second antenna is disposed in front of the first feed mechanism, and is adapted to receive or transmit at least a portion of the energy blocked by the first feed mechanism.
These and other objects, features, and advantages of this invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of illustrative embodiments thereof, which is to be read in connection with the accompanying drawings.
a is a conventional parabolic satellite television antenna, which incorporates a cassegrain geometry.
b is a conventional parabolic satellite television antenna, which incorporates a gregorian geometry.
a is an embodiment of the present invention in which energy is allowed to pass through a leaky subreflector to mitigate the effects of collector surface blockage.
b is a plot of antenna field strength as a function of antenna aperture, in which a shadow caused by feed mechanism blockage has been filled in by leaked energy in accordance with the present invention.
a is a first embodiment of the present invention applied to a parabolic collector surface.
b is the first embodiment of the present invention applied to a FLAPS collector.
c is the first embodiment of the present invention applied to a generic collector surface.
a is a second embodiment of the present invention applied to a parabolic collector surface.
b is the second embodiment of the present invention applied to a FLAPS collector.
c is the second embodiment of the present invention applied to a generic collector surface.
d is the second embodiment of the present invention applied to a parabolic collector surface and a prime focus feed mechanism.
e is a second embodiment of the present invention applied to a FLAPS collector and a prime focus feed mechanism.
f is the second embodiment of the present invention applied to a generic collector surface and a prime focus feed mechanism.
There are essentially two types of center-feed mechanisms commonly used with reflector antennas.
a and 4b show two additional types of antenna feed mechanism.
As shown in
The gregorian feed geometry shown in
For the types of feed mechanism shown in
a shows one solution in accordance with the present invention to the effects of blockage shown in
Thus, the resulting plot 40 in
Two preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described. Both of these embodiments may be implemented with a parabolic collector surface (
A first embodiment shown in
Direction, amplitude, and phase adjustments are preferably implemented by a lens 62, shaped aperture, or any structure known in the art 66, such as a dielectric coating, as shown in
As described above, the shadow 46 shown in
a shows the second embodiment of the present invention applied to a parabolic collector surface 54,
The second embodiment preferably collects energy 74 using an auxiliary antenna 70, 72 in substantially the same way shown in
In the second embodiment, a hole 76 is preferably cut in the subreflector 68 where the blockage shadow is located. The energy from the secondary antenna 70, 72 is preferably routed to a secondary feed mechanism 78 placed in the hole 76 in the subreflector 68.
Placing the secondary feed mechanism 78 where the shadow is located on the subreflector 68 substantially meets the requirements of having the signals in the proper geometrical location, but it does not account for proper phasing or amplitude between the signal injected at the secondary feed mechanism 78 and the signal from the primary feed mechanism 52.
Proper phasing between these signals is preferably accomplished by introducing an electrical delay or delay element 80, 82 between the primary feed mechanism 52 and the secondary feed mechanism 78. This electrical delay 80, 82 is preferably implemented by coupling the secondary antenna 70, 72 to the secondary feed mechanism 78 through a coaxial cable having a length in accordance with the desired delay. Direction, amplitude, and phase adjustments may also be implemented in the delay element 82 by means known in the art.
If the delay 80, 82 introduced is correct to within modulo 360°, that is, the energy 74 from the secondary antenna 70, 72 and the energy 64 from the main collector surface 54, 56, 58 differ in phase, if at all, by a multiple of 2π radians, then the second embodiment preferably exhibits a bandwidth performance that is substantially the same as that of the first embodiment. However, if the delay 80, 82 introduced corresponds to that of the path length between the main reflector shadow and the subreflector 68, and this is not modulo 360°, then the bandwidth of the second embodiment would be limited by the particular microwave components used to implement the antenna.
d, 10e, 10f provide greater detail than that shown in
A solid line 84 in
It is to be noted that references herein to receive and/or transmit functions apply to either and/or both of these functions, which are intended to be within the scope of the present invention in accordance with the reciprocity theorem as it relates to antenna design.
Therefore, the method and apparatus formed in accordance with the present invention achieve substantially ideal performance characteristics from a reflector antenna by increasing antenna gain and efficiency, as well as reducing sidelobe levels. The method and apparatus formed in accordance with the present invention also substantially eliminate the effects of collector surface blockage by a feed mechanism or subreflector in reflector antennas.
Although illustrative embodiments of the present invention have been described herein with reference to the accompanying drawing, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to those precise embodiments, and that various other changes and modifications may be applied therein by one skilled in the art without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/540,137, filed Jan. 29, 2004, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4777491 | Bassi et al. | Oct 1988 | A |
4905014 | Gonzalez et al. | Feb 1990 | A |
5373302 | Wu | Dec 1994 | A |
6198457 | Walker et al. | Mar 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050168395 A1 | Aug 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60540137 | Jan 2004 | US |