DocumentCode
1034751
Title
Simulation and analysis of antennas radiating in a complex environment
Author
Kim, Jocob J. ; Burnside, Walter D.
Author_Institution
Texas Instruments Inc., McKinney, TX, USA
Volume
34
Issue
4
fYear
1986
fDate
4/1/1986 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
554
Lastpage
562
Abstract
An accurate and efficient numerical solution is developed for predicting high-frequency radiation patterns of antennas mounted on curved surfaces. This solution employs the uniform geometrical theory of diffraction (UTD) and has mainly been used to analyze airborne antenna patterns. In this case the aircraft is modeled in its most basic form so that the solution is applicable to general-type aircraft. The fuselage is modeled as a perfectly conducting composite ellipsoid, whereas, the wings, stabilizers, nose, fuel tanks, and engines, etc. are simulated by perfectly conducting fiat plates. The composite-ellipsoid fuselage model is necessary to simulate successfully the wide variety of real world fuselage shapes. Since the antenna is mounted on the fuselage, it has a dominant effect on the resulting radiation pattern, so it must be simulated accurately, especially near the antenna. Various radiation patterns are calculated for military aircraft, private aircraft, and the space shuttle orbiter. The application of this solution to practical airborne antenna problems illustrates its versatility and design capability. The solution accuracy is verified by the comparisons between calculated and measured data.
Keywords
Aircraft antennas; Geometrical diffraction theory; Aircraft propulsion; Analytical models; Antenna radiation patterns; Antenna theory; Ellipsoids; Military aircraft; Nose; Orbital calculations; Pattern analysis; Physical theory of diffraction;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-926X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TAP.1986.1143838
Filename
1143838
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