Multi-mode square horn with cavity-suppressed higher-order modes

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6535174
  • Patent Number
    6,535,174
  • Date Filed
    Monday, December 20, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, March 18, 2003
    21 years ago
Abstract
An antenna apparatus that has an increased efficiency, and a method for increasing the efficiency of multi-mode antenna feed horns, is disclosed. The method comprises the steps of exciting, within the antenna, a desired transmission mode and an undesired transmission mode of the signal to be transmitted, and converting, within the antenna, power within the undesired transmission mode into power for the desired transmission mode of the signal to be transmitted. An antenna apparatus in accordance with the present invention comprises a feed horn having an input opening, an aperture, and a cavity, disposed between the input opening and the aperture, for suppressing an undesired transmission mode of the antenna and exciting a desired transmission mode of the antenna.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




This invention relates in general to antennas, and, in particular, to a multi-mode square horn antenna with cavity suppressed higher order modes.




2. Description of Related Art




Communications satellites are in widespread use. The communications satellites are used to deliver television and communications signals around the earth for public, private, and military uses.




The primary design constraints for communications satellites are antenna beam coverage and radiated Radio Frequency (RF) power. These two design constraints are typically thought of to be paramount in the satellite design because they determine which customers on the earth will be able to receive satellite communications service. Further, the satellite weight becomes a factor, because launch vehicles are limited as to how much weight can be placed into orbit.




Many satellites operate over fixed coverage regions that are geographically limited by the beam coverage and available RF power. The inefficiencies of RF systems, losses due to cabling, and other system constraints limit the available power for the overall system, and, as such, limit the signal strength that is available for communication links. As such, to provide a stable, reliable communications link, the geographic area that is serviced by the satellite must be limited.




Many satellite systems would be more efficient if they contained feed horns that have higher gain or more efficient feed horn systems. However, related art feed horns that have increased efficiency are larger and heavier than standard antennas, and, as such, require larger payload volumes. Further, the increased weight increases launch costs.




There is therefore a need in the art for increased efficiency antenna systems. There is also a need in the art for antenna systems that have increased efficiency feed horns that are of comparable size and weight. There is also a need in the art for antenna systems that provide more complete utilization of space assets without dramatically increasing the cost of manufacturing and operating a satellite. There is also a need in the art for antenna elements in array applications having higher element efficiency such that the number of elements can be reduced. A reduction in the number of elements in an array antenna application reduces the number of feed components and amplifiers, lowers the mass of the system, and reduces cost and antenna complexity.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




To overcome the limitations in the prior art described above, and to overcome other limitations that will become apparent upon reading and understanding the present specification, the present invention discloses an antenna apparatus that has an increased efficiency, and a method for increasing the efficiency of multi-mode antenna feed horns.




The method comprises the steps of exciting, within the antenna, a desired transmission mode and an undesired transmission mode of the signal to be transmitted, and converting, within the antenna, power within the undesired transmission mode into power for the desired transmission mode of the signal to be transmitted. An antenna apparatus in accordance with the present invention comprises a feed horn having an input opening, an aperture, and a cavity, disposed between the input opening and the aperture, for suppressing an undesired transmission mode of the antenna and exciting a desired transmission mode of the antenna.




An antenna in accordance with the present invention provides an increased efficiency antenna system. An antenna in accordance with the present invention also provides an antenna system that has increased efficiency feed horns that are of comparable size and weight. An antenna in accordance with the present invention also provides antenna array systems that provide more complete utilization of space assets without dramatically increasing the cost of manufacturing and operating a satellite. Further, an antenna in accordance with the present invention provides antenna elements in array applications that have higher element efficiency such that the number of elements can be reduced.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




Referring now to the drawings in which like reference numbers represent corresponding parts throughout:





FIG. 1

illustrates a side view of a feed horn of the related art;





FIG. 2

illustrates a step horn of the related art;





FIG. 3

illustrates the cavity feed horn of the present invention;





FIG. 4A

illustrates the radiation efficiency of the feed horn of the present invention compared to the related art;





FIGS. 4B-4G

illustrate alternative embodiments of the cavity feed horn of the present invention;





FIGS. 5A-5C

illustrate the aperture field distributions for various designs of feed horns, including the feed horn of the present invention;





FIG. 6

illustrates the return loss performance of a cavity feed horn of the present invention;





FIG. 7

illustrates typical radiation patterns of a cavity feed horn of the present invention;





FIG. 8A

illustrates an isometric view of the cavity feed horn of the present invention;





FIG. 8B

illustrates the comparison between the measured and computed radiation patterns of the cavity feed horn of the present invention; and





FIG. 9

is a flow chart illustrating the steps used in practicing one embodiment of the present invention.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT




In the following description of the preferred embodiment, reference is made to the accompanying drawings that form a part hereof, and in which is shown by way of illustration a specific embodiment in which the invention may be practiced. It is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized and structural changes may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.




Overview




Many satellites operate over fixed coverage regions that are geographically limited by the beam coverage and available RF power. The inefficiencies of RF systems, losses due to cabling, and other system limitations limit the available power for the overall system, and, as such, limit the signal strength that is available for communication links. As such, to provide a stable, reliable communications link, the geographic area that is serviced by the satellite must be limited.




Many satellite systems would be more efficient if they contained feed horns that are smaller and more efficient. However, related art feed horns that have increased gain are larger and heavier than standard antennas, and, as such, require larger payload volumes. Further, the increased weight increases launch costs.




The present invention describes a high efficiency multi-mode square horn suitable as a radiating element for array as well as reflector antennas. The horn of the present invention can be used in communication satellites as well as other antenna applications. The horn is over 90 percent efficient and can handle dual polarizations, e.g., vertical/horizontal or left-hand circular/right-hand circular polarizations.




The present invention uses a cavity in order to suppress unwanted modes of the radiated signal. Typically, for the dominant Transverse Electric (TE) TE


10


and TE


01


mode input square waveguide, the unwanted modes are the Transverse Electric (TE)


12


and the Transverse Magnetic (TM)


12


modes. The power in the unwanted modes is redirected or converted into desired higher order radiation modes, typically the TE


30


and TE


03


modes, which, in addition to the dominant TE


10


and TE


01


modes, produces a more uniform illumination in the H-plane of the antenna. This more uniform illumination in the H-plane produces a higher efficiency horn.




Cavity Description





FIG. 1

illustrates a side view of a feed horn of the related art. Feed horn


100


typically consists of a radiative chamber


102


and antenna walls. Radiative chamber


102


is typically the open end of a piece of waveguide, but can be integral to the antenna for connection to an RF system via cables if desired. The radiative chamber


102


attaches to antenna walls


104


at opening


106


. The antenna walls


104


confine the radiation generated in the radiative chamber


102


and direct the radiation in a certain direction. The antenna walls


104


form a pyramidal shape, and, as such, feed horn


100


is typically called a pyramidal horn


100


.




Pyramidal horns


100


are commonly used as radiating elements in phased array antennas or as feeds for shaped reflector antennas for communication satellites. Pyramidal horns radiate electromagnetic radiation in the TE


10


mode. Typical sizes of these pyramidal horns


100


are in the range of 1.8 wavelengths to about 4.0 wavelengths, e.g., at a frequency of 8 gigahertz, the wavelength is approximately 3.75 centimeters (cm), which places the length of the pyramidal horn between 6.75 cm and 15 cm. For such large antenna horn sizes, pyramidal horns


100


suffer from large phase errors across the aperture


108


and have a tapered aperture


108


illumination in the H-plane. As a result of these two effects, efficiency of these pyramidal horns


100


is typically in the range of 75% to 80%, and suffers from the disadvantage of large axial length.





FIG. 2

illustrates a step horn of the related art. The efficiency of a typical pyramidal feed horn can be improved to about 85% by introducing the TE


30


mode in addition to the dominant TE


10


mode of pyramidal horn


100


. Step horn


200


uses a step junction


202


in antenna walls


204


to produce another radiative mode, the TE


30


mode, from signals that emanate from opening


206


. However, step junction


202


also produces other modes of the signal, e.g., the unwanted TE


12


and TM


12


modes that limit the efficiency of the step horn


200


. The axial length of the step horn


200


is typically shorter than a comparable pyramidal horn


100


.





FIG. 3

illustrates one embodiment of the cavity feed horn of the present invention. The present invention is a cavity feed horn


300


having a cavity


302


disposed between the opening


304


and aperture


306


of cavity feed horn


300


to suppress the unwanted TE


12


and TM


12


transmission modes. Cavity


302


also converts the power in the unwanted TE


12


and TM


12


modes to the desired TE


10


and TE


30


modes to improve the efficiency of the cavity feed horn


300


. The cavity


302


makes the aperture


306


illumination more uniform and increases the efficiency to about 92%. Aperture


306


outline


308


, which is the longitudinal cross-section of the cavity feed horn


300


, remains substantially square in nature. The cavity feed horn


300


is approximately 12% more efficient than pyramidal horn


100


and 6% more efficient than step horn


200


.




This increase in the horn


300


efficiency can be used to reduce the number of horn


300


elements in an antenna array to achieve similar performance as an array using pyramidal horns


100


, or to reduce the RF power needed to excite a feed horn


300


, or an array of feed horns


300


, as opposed to a pyramidal horn


100


, or an array of pyramidal horns


100


, by approximately 12% to 17%. This reduction in the number of horns


300


required reduces the weight and required power of the antenna system, and therefore reduces the cost of manufacture and operation. Further, reduction in the RF power required to complete the communications link reduces the weight of power supplies needed on the satellite, thereby reducing the cost and weight of the spacecraft.




Cavity feed horn


300


typically has a four-fold symmetry, as shown in outline


308


, and incorporates two steps


310


and


312


in two opposite directions, forming a cavity


302


. Cavity


302


is typically formed equidistant from opening


304


and aperture


306


, but can be formed anywhere between opening


304


and aperture


306


as desired. The cavity


302


excites desired modes of transmission and suppresses the unwanted modes of transmission and thereby increases the efficiency of the cavity feed horn


300


, also called a multi-mode square horn, to about 92%.




Although described with respect to the desired modes of TE


10


and TE


30


, and the undesired modes of TE


12


and TM


12


, any transmission mode can be excited or suppressed using cavity


302


.




The present invention also allows array antennas to utilize dual polarizations, e.g., dual-linear or dual-circular polarizations, because the aperture


306


outline


308


is square. Square outlines


308


are desirable because the cavity feed horn


300


input (opening


304


) can couple directly to the square waveguide


102


carrying a circularly polarized signal. Further the square apertures


306


maximize the array aperture area because no inter-element gap exists between adjacent cavity feed horns


300


. If aperture


306


were circular, interstitial sites would exist between the cavity feed horns


300


.




Advantages of the Present Invention





FIG. 4A

illustrates the radiation efficiency


400


of the feed horn of the present invention compared to the related art. In order to minimize the number of feed horns in an array, the feed horns should have high radiation efficiency. The typical radiation efficiency, in the X-band frequency range, of a large pyramidal horn


100


is about 80%, as shown by graph


402


. The radiation efficiency of a H-plane step horn


200


with a rectangular input that supports the TE


10


mode and does not support the TE


01


mode is about 84% to 86%, as shown by graph


404


.




However, a rectangular input cannot be used for dual-linear or dual-circular polarization applications, as described above. For good circular polarization with minimum cross-polar power near the boresight direction, the horn advantageously has a four-fold symmetry, as provided by a square outline


308


. A square outline


308


also makes the cavity feed horn


300


directly compatible with waveguide


310


, which provides the signal to be transmitted by the cavity feed horn


300


. To comply with the above requirements and to increase the efficiency of a square horn, steps


202


must be made in all four walls


204


in order to generate the TE


30


and TE


03


modes.




TM


12


modes that have lower cutoff frequencies than that of the TE


30


mode. These two modes taper the aperture distribution which effectively reduce the radiation efficiency, as shown in graph


404


.




The intensity of the undesired radiation modes is suppressed in the present invention by adding a second step


312


discontinuity in an appropriate location so as to create a cavity


302


, as described with respect to

FIG. 3. A

typical step horn


200


with highest possible efficiency will have a total power carried by the TE


10


, TE


30


, TE


12


/TM


12


modes of 95.9%, 1.6%, and 2.5% respectively. With the second step


312


added in an appropriate location as in the cavity feed horn


300


of the present invention, the total power carried by the TE


10


, TE


30


and TE


12


become 94.6%, 4.2%, and 1.2% respectively. For an ideal situation of a dual mode horn, the total power carried by the TE


10


, TE


30


and TE


12


become 94.3%, 5.7%, and 0.0%, respectively. The second step


312


of the present invention brings the modal power ratio closer to the ideal limit.




As a result of the cavity


302


introduced in the cavity feed horn


300


, the cavity feed horn


300


efficiency is increased to about 91%, as shown in graph


406


. The graph


406


illustrates a 6% increase in the cavity feed horn


300


efficiency compared to a step horn


200


, and a 12% increase compared to a pyramidal horn


100


. The cavity feed horn


300


, when used in an array, enables a designer to reduce the number of elements (feed horns) in the array by about 6% to 12% compared to designs using step horns


200


or pyramidal horns


100


, resulting in significant cost and mass savings.




The present invention takes advantage of the guide wavelength differences between the different transmission modes to selectively suppress the undesired transmission modes. In the present invention, the first step


310


discontinuity generates the TE


30


, TE


12


, and TM


12


modes. Immediately after the first step


310


discontinuity, the TE


10


, TE


12


, and the TE


30


modal fields are in phase, the phase-reference point being located on the axis of the cavity feed horn


300


. This phase relationship ensures the continuity of the electric fields at both sides of the step


310


discontinuity.




At the second step


312


discontinuity, the TE


10


and TE


30


transmission modes are out of phase, because the aperture opening abruptly reduces. If the distance between step


310


and step


312


is chosen properly, e.g., the length of cavity


302


is selected to be one-half of the guide wavelength of the TE


12


/TE


10


modes, then the TE


30


mode created by the TE


10


mode and the two discontinuities will be added substantially in-phase, and the TE


12


/TM


12


signals add out-of-phase at the second step


312


discontinuity. As a result, the unwanted mode content due to the TE


12


/TM


12


modes is reduced while the desired TE


30


mode content is enhanced.




The desired TE


10


and undesired TE


12


transmission modes arrive at the second step


312


discontinuity substantially in phase because these two desired transmission modes have almost equal phase velocities. These two modes jointly produce the TE


10


transmission mode after the second step


312


discontinuity with a minimum amount of the TE


12


mode, which is the opposite effect of the first discontinuity. Thus, after the second step


312


discontinuity, the desired TE


30


transmission mode is intensified and the undesired TE


12


transmission mode is suppressed by converting power in the undesired mode to power in the desired mode. Other forms of suppression, such as elimination of transmission, reflection, or other means are also possible using the step


312


of the present invention. By transferring power from undesired transmission modes to desired transmission modes, the efficiency of the cavity feed horn


300


is increased.




A preferred embodiment of cavity feed horn


300


operates at X-band, which is between 7.8 and 8.5 gigahertz. The preferred embodiment has cavity


302


placed substantially halfway between input opening


304


and aperture


306


. Cavity


302


is typically five centimeters in length, which is approximately one-half guide wavelength for the TE


12


transmission mode. The aperture


306


has sides of 2.75 inches in length, and is substantially square. Other embodiments are possible within the operational frequency band, which will excite certain desired transmission modes and suppress certain other undesired transmission modes. Further, cavity feed horn can be designed to operate at other frequency bands, such as C-band, Ku-band, Ka-band, or other frequency bands by utilizing proper size and length relationships for the cavity feed horn


300


.




Although shown as having a cavity


302


that extends completely around the perimeter of cavity feed horn


300


, cavity


302


can take other shapes. For example, cavity


302


can exist on one face of the cavity feed horn


300


, two faces of the cavity feed horn


300


, two opposing faces of the cavity feed horn


300


, or three faces of the cavity feed horn


300


. Cavity


302


may only exist on parts of one or more of the faces of cavity feed horn


300


as well. More than one cavity


302


may be used to excite and suppress transmission modes as desired.




The cross section of cavity


302


is shown as rectangular, but can take other shapes such as triangular, sawtooth, square, round, piecewise linear, or other shapes to excite and suppress the transmission modes desired for cavity feed horn


300


. Further, although shown as a cavity


302


that extends away from the walls of the cavity feed horn


300


, a change in the wall shape that extends into the opening of the cavity feed horn can provide the same advantages as cavity


302


. As such, cavity


302


, when used herein, refers not only to an enlargement of the cross section of the cavity feed horn


300


, but also refers to a reduction or other change in the cross-section of the cavity feed horn


300


that differs from the angular dimensions of the cavity feed horn


300


.





FIGS. 4B-4G

illustrate alternative embodiments of the cavity feed horn of the present invention.





FIG. 4B

illustrates cavity


302


having a triangular cross section, and cavity


302


is not symmetrical about an axis of the cavity feed horn


300


. Walls


314


define the aperture


306


and the input opening


302


of the cavity feed horn


300


. Walls


314


, however, are not required to define cavity


302


symmetrically about the axis of cavity feed horn


300


.





FIG. 4C

illustrates cavity


302


having a curved cross section. Although aperture


306


is typically square in cross section, cavity


302


is not limited to having a square cross section. First step


310


and second step


312


, as shown in

FIG. 4C

, can be rounded as well as creating a discontinuity.

FIG. 4D

illustrates cavity


302


having an asymmetrical aspect about an axis of cavity feed horn


300


.

FIG. 4E

illustrates that cavity


302


can reside within walls


314


instead of extending away from a centerline of cavity feed horn


300


. Further, cavity


302


and cavity


316


can be asymmetrical, as well as placed at different distances from aperture


306


and input opening


304


.

FIG. 4F

illustrates that cavity


302


can be substantially oppositely opposed without substantially circumscribing cavity feed horn


300


.

FIG. 4G

illustrates that cavity


302


can be filled with material


318


or partially filled with material


318


.




Transmission and Reflection Characteristics





FIGS. 5A-5C

illustrate the aperture field distributions for various designs of feed horns, including the feed horn of the present invention.





FIG. 5A

illustrates the uniformity of the field as measured in the normal and parallel planes of a pyramidal horn


100


. Graph


500


illustrates the normal field distribution, and graph


502


illustrates the parallel field distribution.





FIG. 5B

illustrates the uniformity of the field as measured in the normal and parallel planes of a step horn


200


. Graph


504


illustrates the normal field distribution, and graph


506


illustrates the parallel field distribution.





FIG. 5C

illustrates the uniformity of the field as measured in the normal and parallel planes of the cavity feed horn


300


of the present invention. Graph


508


illustrates the normal field distribution, and graph


510


illustrates the parallel field distribution. The cavity feed horn


300


has more aperture uniformity compared to pyramidal horn


100


and step horn


200


, but broadens the peak of the field strength in the normal direction as shown in graph


508


.





FIG. 6

illustrates the return loss performance of a cavity feed horn of the present invention. The return loss


600


is better than 25 dB over the 7% bandwidth.





FIG. 7

illustrates typical radiation patterns of a cavity feed horn of the present invention.




The transmission patterns


700


of cavity feed horn


300


are shown at a single frequency, typically a center frequency of the cavity feed horn


300


. As discussed above, this frequency is typically 8.2 gigahertz. H-plane performance is shown in graph


702


, and E-plane performance is shown in graph


704


. The 45-degree transmission pattern is shown in graph


706


, and the cross-polar levels are shown in graph


708


. The cross-polar levels of graph


708


are 30 dB below the peak of the copolar peaks of graphs


702


,


704


, and


706


.





FIG. 8A

illustrates an isometric view of the cavity feed horn of the present invention. The steps


310


and


312


and aperture


306


are indicated.





FIG. 8B

illustrates the comparison between the measured and computed radiation patterns of the cavity feed horn of the present invention. Measured pattern


800


and computed pattern


802


in the 45 degree plane are shown. The measured pattern


800


agrees well with computed pattern


802


. The efficiency of cavity feed horn


300


is measured at 95%. Cross-polarization computed pattern


804


and measured pattern


806


are also indicated.





FIG. 9

is a flowchart illustrating the steps used to practice one embodiment of the present invention.




Block


900


illustrates the step of exciting, within the antenna, a desired transmission mode and an undesired transmission mode of the signal to be transmitted.




Block


902


illustrates the present invention performing the step of suppressing, within the antenna, power within the undesired transmission mode.




Summary




The following paragraphs describe some alternative methods of accomplishing the same objects and some additional advantages for the present invention.




The techniques described in the present invention can be used for multiple antennas in arrays or other multiple antenna configurations. Further, the feed horns can be combined with various reflectors and reflective surfaces to modify the beam patterns and other system characteristics of a system employing the feed horn of the present invention.




Although described with respect to the desired TE


10


and TE


30


modes, and undesired TE


12


and TM


12


transmission modes, cavity


302


can be designed such that other modes can be excited or suppressed by cavity


302


as desired. This can be accomplished by changing the shape of the cavity


302


, or by placing cavity


302


at a different location between the aperture


306


and the input opening


304


.




The present invention can be used with many satellite payloads and is not limited by frequency band. For example, fixed and broadcast satellite services at Ku-band and C-band and personal communication satellites at Ka-band can all benefit from implementation of the present invention. Further, the present invention is applicable to direct radiating array antennas that produce multiple shaped beams or spot beams for specific applications.




In summary, the present invention provides an antenna apparatus that has an increased efficiency, and a method for increasing the efficiency of multi-mode antenna feed horns. The method comprises the steps of exciting, within the antenna, a desired transmission mode and an undesired transmission mode of the signal to be transmitted, and converting, within the antenna, power within the undesired transmission mode into power for the desired transmission mode of the signal to be transmitted.




An antenna apparatus in accordance with the present invention comprises a feed horn having an input opening, an aperture, and a cavity, disposed between the input opening and the aperture, for suppressing an undesired transmission mode of the antenna and exciting a desired transmission mode of the antenna.




The foregoing description of the preferred embodiment of the invention has been presented for the purposes of illustration and description and is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. It is intended that the scope of the invention be limited not by this detailed description, but rather by the claims appended hereto.



Claims
  • 1. An antenna, comprising:a feed horn having at least one wall, an input opening and an aperture, wherein the aperture is larger than the input opening and the feed horn has a cross section increasing continuously from the input opening to the aperture; and a cavity, having a single opening and the single opening facing a closed end, the cavity disposed on the at least one wall, between the input opening and the aperture and away from the input opening where the cross section is greater than the input opening and less than the aperture, for suppressing an undesired transmission mode of the antenna and exciting a desired transmission mode of the antenna.
  • 2. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the cavity is disposed substantially halfway between the input opening and the aperture.
  • 3. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the aperture cross section is substantially square.
  • 4. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the desired transmission mode comprises a TE10 and a TE30 modes.
  • 5. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the undesired transmission mode comprises a TE12 and a TM12 modes.
  • 6. The antenna of claim 1, further comprising a waveguide, coupled to the input opening, for providing a signal to the antenna.
  • 7. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the cavity suppresses the undesired transmission mode by converting power from the undesired transmission mode into power for the desired transmission mode.
  • 8. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the cavity extends substantially around the interior of the feed horn.
  • 9. The antenna of claim 1, wherein a cross section of the cavity is selected as one of a group comprising square, rectangular, sawtooth, curved, and piecewise linear.
  • 10. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the feed horn further includes opposing walls and the cavity resides on the opposing walls of the feed horn.
  • 11. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the antenna operates at a frequency substantially between 7.8 and 8.5 gigahertz, and a length of the cavity is substantially five centimeters.
  • 12. The antenna of claim 11, wherein a center of the cavity is positioned three centimeters distant from the input opening and three centimeters distant from the aperture.
  • 13. The antenna of claim 12, wherein a cross section of the cavity is substantially rectangular.
  • 14. The antenna of claim 1, wherein a cross section of the cavity is asymmetrical.
  • 15. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the cavity includes a first step discontinuity and a second step discontinuity transferring power from undesired transmission modes to desired transition modes.
  • 16. The antenna, comprising:a feed horn having at least one wall, an input opening and an aperture, wherein the aperture is larger than the input opening and the feed horn has a cross section increasing continuously from the input opening to the aperture; and a cavity, having a single opening and the single opening facing a closed end, the cavity disposed on the at least one wall about an interior of the feed horn between the input opening and the aperture and away from the input opening where the cross section is greater than the input opening and less than the aperture.
  • 17. A method for transmitting a signal from an antenna, comprising the steps of:exciting, within the antenna, a desired transmission mode and an undesired transmission mode of the signal to be transmitted; and suppressing within the antenna, power within the undesired transmission mode; wherein the exciting and suppressing are performed by a feed horn having at least one wall, an input opening and an aperture and a cavity, having a single opening and the single opening facing a closed end, the cavity disposed on the at least one wall, between the input opening and the aperture and away from the input opening where a cross section of the feed horn is greater than the input opening and less than the aperture and the aperture is larger than the input opening and the cross section of the feed horn increases continuously from the input opening to the aperture.
  • 18. The method of claim 17, wherein the step of suppressing comprises the step of converting power from the undesired transmission mode into power for the desired transmission mode.
  • 19. The method of claim 17, wherein the desired transmission mode comprises the TE10 and TE30 modes.
  • 20. The method of claim 17, wherein the undesired transmission mode comprises TE12 and TM12 modes.
  • 21. The method of claim 17, wherein the step of exciting is performed by a first step discontinuity within the antenna.
  • 22. The method of claim 17, wherein the step of converting is performed by a step discontinuity within the antenna.
  • 23. A signal to be transmitted by an antenna, formed by performing the steps of:exciting, within the antenna, a desired transmission mode and an undesired transmission mode of the signal to be transmitted; and suppressing, within the antenna, power within the undesired transmission mode; wherein die exciting and suppressing are perforated by a feed horn having at least one wall, an input opening and an aperture and away from the input opening where a cross section of the feed horn is greater than the input opening and less than the aperture and a cavity, having a single opening and the single opening facing a closed end, the cavity disposed on the at least one wall, between the input open and the aperture and the aperture is larger than the input opening and the cross section of the feed horn increases continuously from the input opening to the aperture.
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