The present invention relates to microwave monopole antennas, positioned inside a radome.
Known microwave monopole antennas have a surface of revolution that is, for example, cylindrical or conical and it is known that, over their whole bandwidth, they have an omnidirectional radiation pattern that is uniform in a plane orthogonal to their axis.
It is also known, as shown for example by the prior documents U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,006,047 and 7,116,278, that such omnidirectional antennas can be mounted on a ground plane constituted by the outer surface of a carrier vehicle, such as an aircraft, for example for the purposes of communication or detection of radar. To protect said antennas, each of them is surrounded by a cylindrical radome coaxial thereto. Because of its cylindrical shape and its coaxial mounting, such a radome does not disturb the omnidirectional uniformity of the radiation pattern of the antenna/radome assembly thus produced.
Such a known antenna/radome assembly does, however, have the drawback that the cylindrical radome is positioned orthogonal to the airflow around said vehicle, so that it generates high aerodynamic drag.
To avoid this drawback, said radome could conceivably be given a profiled aerodynamic shape; but in that case such a shape (by definition not produced by revolution about the axis of the antenna) and also the structure of the radome (the permittivity of which is generally greater than 1 for reasons of mechanical resistance) would entail the disappearance of the uniformity of the omnidirectional radiation pattern of the profiled antenna/radome assembly, with varying degrees of deformation depending on frequency and direction, which could lead to very negative values for gain (expressed in decibels isotropic) at certain points of said radiation pattern.
The subject-matter of the present invention is to remedy this drawback by making it possible to produce such an antenna/radome assembly having both uniform omnidirectional radiation and low aerodynamic drag.
To this end, according to the invention, the method for ensuring a uniform radiation pattern of an assembly comprising:
Indeed, the applicants have found that such ridges made it possible to reorientate, in the directions in which they face, the waves of the antenna that are disturbed by the presence of the radome, and therefore to combat the formation of areas of the radiation pattern with reduced, or even negative, gain values.
Thus, thanks to the present invention, said antenna/radome assembly has low aerodynamic drag, because of the profiling of said radome, and an omnidirectional radiation that is at least approximately uniform, because said ridges constitute areas of electromagnetic diffraction that make it possible to control the radiation of the antenna provided with said aerodynamic radome.
According to the invention, an assembly comprising:
In a preferred embodiment of said antenna/radome assembly according to the present invention:
In an advantageous embodiment, on either side of each of said longitudinal ridges, positioned directly facing the side walls of the radome, the surface of said monopole antenna comprises two longitudinal ridges obliquely facing the corresponding side wall of the radome. Preferably, said longitudinal ridges positioned directly facing the side walls of the radome and said longitudinal ridges positioned obliquely facing said side walls are portions of ellipses. In this case, all of said longitudinal ridges can belong to three ellipses centered on the axis of said antenna, the minor axes, major axes and relative orientations of which form parameters so as to optimize a uniform radiation pattern of said monopole antenna/radome assembly.
In a variant, on either side of the median longitudinal plane of the radome, the longitudinal ridge positioned directly facing the corresponding side wall of the radome and the two associated longitudinal ridges positioned obliquely facing the latter side wall can merge to form a single, rounded lateral projection. In this case the surface of said antenna has a rounded groove facing said leading edge and said trailing edge of the radome.
In order to reduce the effects of diffraction generated by the open end of said monopole antenna, said end is advantageously closed by a plug. Such a plug may have different forms, for example that of a cap.
Furthermore, to reduce the lateral dimensions of the antenna, it may be advantageous for said monopole antenna to be positioned inside a hollow shape made of a dielectric material, for example of ceramic type, which takes on the shape thereof and the permittivity of which results from a compromise between the lateral reduction of said antenna and the bandwidth of said antenna.
In one exemplary embodiment, the monopole antenna is made of brass, the permittivity of the material constituting the radome (for example, a composite material of FR-4 type) is of the order of 4, and the permittivity of the material constituting said hollow cylinder is of the order of 5.
Preferably, in order to secure said monopole antenna to said radome, the radome is filled with a foam of low permittivity (for example of the order of 1) confining said monopole antenna.
The present invention can be implemented both for generally conical-shaped monopole antennas with a wide bandwidth and for generally cylindrical-shaped monopole antennas with a narrow bandwidth. However, the following refers mainly to a generally conical-shaped monopole antenna.
The figures in the appended drawings will make it easier to understand how the invention can be implemented. In these figures, identical references denote similar elements.
The radome 1, illustrated in
The radome 1 has the form of a hollow body with an aerodynamic profile 2, comprising two opposite side walls 3 and 4, connected at their ends by a leading edge 5 and by a trailing edge 6. The leading edge 5 and the trailing edge 6 define a median longitudinal plane with symmetry M for said radome, containing the longitudinal axis X-X thereof.
Inside the radome 1 of
Thus, the axes X-X and Y-Y form a rectangular reference positioning mark about the longitudinal axis l-l of the monopole antenna 7. In the diagrams in
In a known manner, when the monopole antenna 7 is not positioned inside the radome 1, its radiation pattern R7 is uniformly omnidirectional and its gain values are positive in all directions (see
In contrast, in the configuration in
To remedy these drawbacks and produce a radome 1/monopole antenna assembly having a substantially uniform omnidirectional radiation pattern, the invention consists, for an aerodynamic radome of given form and permittivity and, preferably, while preserving the outer shell of said antenna 7, in optimizing the contour of the section of the monopole antenna by forming convex areas (projecting ridges) and, consequently, concave areas (grooves) on its surface, constituting areas of electromagnetic diffraction that, by electromagnetic coupling with the aerodynamic radome 1, are capable of allowing such an omnidirectional, at least substantially uniform, radiation pattern to be produced. Thus, the number, distribution and size of said projecting ridges constitute parameters which make it possible to control the diffraction of the electromagnetic waves over the surface of the monopole antenna and, therefore, the radiation of the assembly formed by the aerodynamic radome 1 and the monopole antenna. The invention is based on the fact that, in the first instance, a ridge focuses energy in the direction in which it is facing.
Thus, referring to
In accordance with the present invention, to fill at least some of these areas Z30, Z90, Z150, Z210, Z270 and Z330, projecting longitudinal ridges at least approximately facing said areas are provided on the surface of antenna of the invention.
A monopole antenna 8 of this kind, according to the present invention, is illustrated in
As illustrated in
In
To optimize even further the radiation pattern of the monopole antenna/radome assembly, use can be made of a known antenna design tool including an optimization module (for example implementing an optimization algorithm such as the Newton method), in which the antenna and its radome are described by a geometric model, of CAD type.
It is then possible to produce an improved monopole antenna, such as the antenna 10 illustrated in
The radiation pattern R110 at 5 GHz of the assembly formed by the radome 1 and the monopole antenna 10 is illustrated in
As shown by
Moreover, the monopole antenna 8 (
Although these figures illustrate generally conical-shaped monopole antennas, it goes without saying that the present invention also relates to generally cylindrical-shaped monopole antennas.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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13 51546 | Feb 2013 | FR | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140240192 A1 | Aug 2014 | US |