Title :
A high aperture efficiency, wide-angle scanning offset reflector antenna
Author :
Craig, William P. ; Rappaport, Carey M. ; Mason, Jeffrey S.
Author_Institution :
Antenna Syst. Branch, Naval Undersea Warfare Center, New London, CT, USA
fDate :
11/1/1993 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A unique single offset reflector antenna has been designed which provides as much as ±30° of scanning in azimuth while maintaining a much higher aperture efficiency than a torus antenna. Like a torus antenna, different portions of the reflector are illuminated for each scanned beam. The reflector profile curve in the plane of scan is found by least squares to minimize the error for the beams with the greatest scan angle, and then polynomial terms of up to sixth order which minimize nonplanar phase errors are added to produce a three-dimensional reflector surface. Numerical simulation indicates very good results for all 0.5° beams in the ±30° azimuth field of view, with peak gain no more than 0.3 dB below ideal and highest side-lobe levels no worse than 13.3 dB below the peak gain. Additionally, comparable performance can be extended to the elevation plane out to 15°/-30°, although full azimuth performance becomes compromised at extreme elevation scan angles. By using an offset design, there is no blockage of the outgoing beam by the feed array assembly for azimuth scanning. With better feed performance than comparably sized paraboloids, and being more compact than similar torus reflectors, this novel antenna should find numerous uses in spacecraft and terrestrial applications
Keywords :
antenna radiation patterns; reflector antennas; scanning antennas; 3D reflector surface; aperture efficiency; azimuth scanning; elevation plane; feed array assembly; feed performance; gain; least squares; nonplanar phase errors; numerical simulation; offset reflector antenna; polynomial terms; reflector profile curve; scan angle; side-lobe levels; spacecraft applications; terrestrial applications; torus antenna; wide-angle scanning; Antenna feeds; Aperture antennas; Assembly; Azimuth; Design methodology; Directive antennas; Least squares methods; Numerical simulation; Polynomials; Reflector antennas;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on