The present invention relates to reflector antennas and polarizer waveguides, and specifically to a ring focus antenna system having an ultra-wide bandwidth.
In a satellite communication system, antennas are used to transmit and receive electromagnetic (EM) signals between a terminal station, which may be earthbound, ship borne, or airborne, and an orbiting satellite.
For very small aperture terminal (VSAT) applications, the radiation patterns of an RFA system must satisfy tight constraints on various figures of merit, such as aperture efficiency, main beam-width, side-lobe (SL) level, cross polarization discrimination (XPD), gain-over-noise temperature (G/T), effective isotropic radiated power (EIRP), and voltage standing wave ratio (VSWR).
A technical paper by L. Zhao et al., entitled “A Ring-Focus Antenna with Splash Plate in Ka-Band”, and published on 18 Mar. 2018 in Hindawi International Journal of Antennas and Propagation, vol. 2018, article ID 9790143, presents a design for a Ka-band antenna for use in a VSAT earth station of a satellite communication system. The design, which uses a parabolic RFA with a splash plate feed, is claimed to achieve low sidelobe levels and an antenna aperture efficiency of greater than 65%, for Ka-band communication frequencies.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,211,834 to T. E. Durham et al., dated 3 Apr. 2001, and entitled “Multiband Ring Focus Antenna Employing Shaped-Geometry Main Reflector And Diverse-Geometry Shaped Subreflector-Feeds”, teaches a multiband, shaped ring focus antenna architecture employing only a single or common main reflector, that is shaped such that it can be shared by each of a pair of interchangeable, diversely shaped close proximity-coupled, subreflector-feed pairs designed for operation at respectively different spectral bands. The operational band of the antenna is changed by swapping out the sub-reflector-feed pairs.
Waveguide polarizing feeds are used in satellite antenna systems to convert a linearly polarized input signal into a circularly polarized output signal. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,097,264 to J. M. Vezmar, dated 1 Aug. 2000, and entitled “Broad Band Quad Ridged Polarizer”, discloses a broadband quad-ridged waveguide polarizer (QRWP) having four axial ridges, one on each wall of the waveguide. The axial ridges are configured to provide a net phase difference equal to 90 degrees between orthogonal signal components of a linearly polarized input signal, at a predetermined EM frequency.
The present invention discloses an RFA system having an ultra-wide bandwidth (UWB). For example, the UWB may cover both Ku-band and Ka-band satellite communication frequencies. The system of the invention provides a first side lobe level off peak gain of less than −20 dB and an aperture efficiency of greater than 70% at EM frequencies within the UWB.
According to one aspect of the presently disclosed subject matter, there is provided a ring focus antenna system having an ultra-wide bandwidth for receiving and transmitting electromagnetic (EM) signals. The system includes a main reflector having an axis of rotation and a splash plate feed assembly. The splash plate feed assembly includes an EM waveguide and a sub-reflector which is substantially aligned with the axis of rotation. The sub-reflector includes surfaces that include segments of an ellipse having a first focal point which coincides with an ISO phase center located inside the waveguide and a second focal point located on a ring focus of the main reflector. The sub-reflector is mated to a dielectric support having a shaped boundary which includes a portion of a circle whose center is at the second focal point.
According to some aspects, the EM waveguide is a quad-ridged polarizing (QRP) waveguide having an ultra-wide bandwidth and a central axis.
According to some aspects, the shaped boundary is configured so that EM rays cross perpendicular to the shaped boundary.
According to some aspects, the ultra-wide bandwidth includes EM frequencies belonging to Ku-band and Ka-band communication frequencies.
According to some aspects, the main reflector has a parabolic surface.
According to some aspects, the splash plate feed assembly includes a splash plate feed cone.
According to some aspects, the feed cone has rotational grooves.
According to some aspects, the QRP waveguide includes a pair of conducting horizontal ridges, a pair of conducting vertical ridges, and a dielectric central portion.
According to some aspects, the ridges include a plurality of steps whose dimensions vary with position along the central axis.
According to some aspects, the ridges include a metallic material selected from a group consisting of aluminium, magnesium, zinc, titanium, chromium, gold, and steel.
According to some aspects, the horizontal ridges are arranged at an oblique angle to the vertical ridges.
According to some aspects, the dielectric central portion is configured to have two slabs arranged in a cross-hair shape.
According to some aspects, the system has a far-field radiation pattern whose first side lobe level off peak gain is less than −20 dB for EM frequencies within the UWB.
According to some aspects, the system has an aperture efficiency which is greater than 70% for EM frequencies within the UWB.
According to some aspects, the system is operationally connected to a receiver and a transmitter in a communication system.
Some embodiments of the present invention are herein described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings. With specific reference to the drawings in detail, it is stressed that the particulars shown are by way of example and for purposes of illustrative discussion of embodiments of the invention. In this regard, the description taken with the drawings makes apparent to those skilled in the art how embodiments of the invention may be practiced.
As shown in
The sub-reflector 110 is formed by a metallic surface mated to the surface of a dielectric support 326. Shaped boundary 306 indicates the bounding surface of dielectric support 326, and includes a portion of a geometric circle 304 whose center is coincident with the focal point FiB, which is also a focal point of displaced ellipse 202.
Dielectric support 326 has a circular cut 328. EM rays reflected by the elliptical segment 322B pass through the dielectric support 326 and cross the shaped boundary 306 which separates the dielectric material from air in a perpendicular direction. Perpendicularity is indicated in
Optionally, shaped boundary 306 may be implemented to include an occluded portion 308 which is coated by a lossy paint covering applied to an exterior surface of dielectric support 326. The covering reduces backscatter by attenuating distal EM rays which are directed towards an outer edge of the main reflector 112.
In one embodiment, the dielectric support 326 preferably consists of a material having a very low dissipation and a dielectric constant that is preferably in a range of 2.4-2.6 within the Ku-band and Ka-band communication frequencies. The ideal material has negligible outgassing and water absorption and is chemically resistant and light weight. One such material is a cross-linked polystyrene microwave plastic known as Rexolite™, which is available from C-Lec Plastics Inc. and has a dielectric constant equal to 2.53 over a broad range of frequencies.
In another embodiment of the feed cone 400, the shaped boundary 306 may have a shaped surface with variable surface radius, as opposed to a smooth circular surface.
Polarizing waveguide 500 converts an incoming transverse electric (TE) linearly polarized mode, such as TE11, to a circularly polarized mode, which is essentially two orthogonal linear modes that are shifted in phase by 90 degrees. The components of the waveguide are designed to be specially tapered in order to maintain the 90 degree phase shift between the orthogonal modes over an ultra-wide band of incoming (or outgoing) frequencies, as described below and illustrated in
The wall 505 of the waveguide 500 is conducting and is bounded by an exterior conducting surface 504 and an interior conducting surface 506. The material of the wall is preferably an EM reflective metal, such as aluminium, magnesium, zinc, titanium, chromium, gold, or steel.
The interior surface 506 is in electrical contact with a pair of horizontal metallic ridges 510H and a pair of vertical metallic ridges 510V. As used in this description, the terms horizontal and vertical are arbitrary, and relate to the X and Y axes, respectively, as shown in
Although the ridge pairs 510H and 510V are shown in
Each pair of ridges, 510H and 510V, has a plurality of steps on the top surface, denoted by 515H and 515V. The height of each step is defined as the distance from the top of the step to the base of the ridge to which it belongs. Typically, the top of each step is parallel to the interior surface 506 of the waveguide, and the step heights vary with distance along the Z-axis. With increasing distance in Z, the steps first increase in height from a pre-determined minimum step height up to a pre-determined maximum step height, and then decrease in height. The configuration of steps in ridges 510H is generally different from that in ridges 510V. For example, the maximum step height of ridges 510H may be greater than that of ridges 510V.
The configuration of steps is symmetrical along the Z-axis so that the polarization conversion takes place in both reception and transmission. In transmission, an input transverse electric (TE) linearly polarized wave entering the waveguide at an oblique angle to the ridges is converted into a circularly polarized output wave; and on reception, an input circularly polarized wave is split into two orthogonal linearly polarized waves.
A central portion 520, indicated by a dashed ellipse in
The central portion 520 appears in
The wavelengths of EM waves propagating inside the waveguide 500 are the same for all polarization directions and for all frequencies within the ultra-wide frequency bandwidth. Since wavelength is equal to the ratio of group velocity and frequency, it follows that the group velocity of the EM waves inside the waveguide is proportional to frequency within the ultra-wide frequency bandwidth.
The specific geometry of the ridges and slabs of waveguide 500 is illustrative of a design which may be optimized for satellite communication at EM frequencies in both Ku-band and Ka-band. However, the principles of the invention may readily be applied by those skilled in the art to a variety of other combinations of EM frequency bands.
In general, the descriptions of the various embodiments of the present disclosure have been presented for purposes of illustration, but are not intended to be exhaustive or limited to the embodiments disclosed. Many other modifications and variations will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the described embodiments. The terminology used herein was chosen to best explain the principles of the embodiments, the practical application or technical improvement over technologies found in the marketplace, or to enable others of ordinary skill in the art to understand the embodiments disclosed herein.
This application is related to and claims priority from commonly owned U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/145,538, entitled “Ring Focus Parabolic Antenna with Improved Splash Plate Feed and Ultra-Wide Band Quad-Ridge Polarizer”, filed on Apr. 4, 2021, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein.
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63145538 | Feb 2021 | US |