• DocumentCode
    1031145
  • Title

    Aperture antenna effects after propagation through strongly disturbed random media

  • Author

    Knepp, Dennis L.

  • Author_Institution
    Mission Research Corp., Monterey, CA USA
  • Volume
    33
  • Issue
    10
  • fYear
    1985
  • fDate
    10/1/1985 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    1074
  • Lastpage
    1084
  • Abstract
    A strongly disturbed layer of ionization irregularities that is used as a propagation channel for radio waves can degrade the propagating wave and thereby affect the resulting measurements at the receiving antenna. The antenna aperture itself also affects measurements of the received signal by its inherent averaging process. Here an analytic solution for the two-position, two-frequency mutual coherence function, valid in the strong-scatter limit, is used to characterize the propagation channel. The channel itself consists of a thick slab of anisotropic electron density irregularities that are elongated in the direction parallel to the earth´s magnetic field. Analytic expressions are obtained that give the effect of the aperture antenna on measurements of received power, decorrelation time (or distance), mean time delay, time delay jitter and coherence bandwidth. These quantities are determined as functions of the aperture diameter and of the angle between the magnetic field and the direction of propagation. It is shown that in strong turbulence aperture averaging can be a significant factor in reducing the received power by angular scattering loss, increasing the observed signal decorrelation time via aperture averaging, and reducing the time delay jitter by suppression of signals received at off-boresight angles. Results are presented for two cases. One-way propagation through an ionospheric communication channel is considered where both transmitter and receiver utilize aperture antennas. This result is easily extended to the case that one of the antennas is an omnidirectional point source, corresponding to the usual ease of transionospheric satellite communication from a small satellite antenna to a large ground based receiver. The second case involves transmission and reception of a radar signal that travels through a disturbed ionospheric channel to a target located in free space. This ease is applicable to the situation of a large antenna aboard a space based radar or to the case of a ground based defense radar.
  • Keywords
    Aperture antennas; Electromagnetic propagation in random media; Ionosphere; Antenna measurements; Antennas and propagation; Aperture antennas; Delay effects; Magnetic analysis; Magnetic field measurement; Radar antennas; Random media; Receiving antennas; Spaceborne radar;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-926X
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TAP.1985.1143491
  • Filename
    1143491