DEPLOYABLE REFLECTOR ANTENNA
20190123417 ยท 2019-04-25
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
H01Q1/28
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A balloon reflector antenna for a satellite, including a spherical balloon with a surface transparent to electromagnetic waves and a reflective surface opposite the transparent surface. The balloon reflector antenna may further include a feed system extending from the center of the balloon that receives electromagnetic waves reflected off the reflective surface and/or outputs electromagnetic waves that are reflected off the reflective surface.
Claims
1. A balloon reflector antenna, comprising: a spherical balloon with a first hemisphere comprising a transparent surface that is transparent to electromagnetic waves and a second hemisphere, opposite the first hemisphere, comprising a reflective surface having a line of focus; and a feed system extending along one or more radial lines from a center of the spherical balloon that receives electromagnetic waves reflected off the reflective surface along the line of focus.
2. The balloon reflector antenna of claim 1, wherein the feed system emits electromagnetic waves along the line of focus that are reflected off the reflective surface.
3. The balloon reflector antenna of claim 2, wherein the electromagnetic waves emitted by the feed system and reflected off the reflective surface pass through the transparent surface.
4. The balloon reflector antenna of claim 1, wherein the electromagnetic waves received by the feed system pass through the transparent surface before being reflected off the reflective surface.
5. The balloon reflector antenna of claim 1, wherein the transparent surface has an absorption rate of less than 1 percent at a wavelength of interest.
6. The balloon reflector antenna of claim 1, wherein the reflective surface comprises the material that forms the transparent surface and a metallic coating.
7. The balloon reflector antenna of claim 1, wherein the feed system is configured to pivot from the center of the spherical balloon to extend along any axis of the spherical balloon.
8. The balloon reflector antenna of claim 1, wherein the balloon reflector antenna is configured to transmit images captured by a satellite imaging system.
9. The balloon reflector antenna of claim 1, wherein the balloon reflector antenna is configured to transmit images captured by a second balloon reflector antenna via synthetic aperture radar.
10. The balloon reflector antenna of claim 1, wherein the balloon reflector antenna is configured to retransmit a signal received by a second balloon reflector antenna.
11. The balloon reflector antenna of claim 1, wherein the balloon reflector antenna is configured such that the spherical balloon and the feed system are stowable in a canister during launch of a satellite.
12. The balloon reflector antenna of claim 11, wherein the balloon reflector antenna is configured such that the spherical balloon is inflatable.
13. The balloon reflector antenna of claim 12, wherein the balloon reflector antenna is configured such that the feed system is pulled out of the canister when the spherical balloon is inflating or inflated.
14. The balloon reflector antenna of claim 1, wherein: the transparent surface of the first hemisphere is continuous throughout the first hemisphere; and the reflective surface of the second hemisphere is continuous throughout the second hemisphere.
15. A method of making a balloon reflector antenna, the method comprising: providing a spherical balloon with a first hemisphere comprising a transparent surface that is transparent to electromagnetic waves and a second hemisphere, opposite the first hemisphere, comprising a reflective surface having a line of focus; and providing a feed system extending along one or more radial lines from the center of the balloon that receives electromagnetic waves reflected off the reflective surface along the line of focus.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein the feed system emits electromagnetic waves along the line of focus that are reflected off the reflective surface.
17. The method of claim 15, further comprising: stowing the spherical balloon, in an uninflated state, in a canister; stowing the feed system in the canister; launching a satellite that includes the canister into space; inflating the spherical balloon while the satellite is in orbit; and pulling the feed system, while the satellite is in orbit, out of the canister into the inflating or inflated spherical balloon.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein the canister is one or more CubeSat units.
19. The method of claim 15, wherein the electromagnetic waves received by the feed system pass through the transparent surface before being reflected off the reflective surface.
20. The method of claim 15, wherein the spherical balloon is configured such that the electromagnetic waves that are reflected off the reflective surface pass through the transparent surface.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] Aspects of exemplary embodiments may be better understood with reference to the accompanying drawings. The components in the drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon illustrating the principles of exemplary embodiments, wherein:
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0020] Preferred embodiments of the present invention will be set forth in detail with reference to the drawings, in which like reference numerals refer to like elements or steps throughout.
[0021]
[0022] As shown in
[0023] The balloon reflector antenna 220 may include a feed system 260. The feed system 260 may be any suitable device that receives electromagnetic waves that are reflected off the reflective surface 244 or emits electromagnetic waves that are reflected off the reflective surface 244. For example, the feed system 260 may include one or more feedhorns, one or more planar antennas, one or more spherical correctors such as a quasi-optical spherical corrector or a line feed (as illustrated in
[0024] In order to focus the balloon reflector antenna 220, the feed system 260 may include the motorized mount 262 to move the feed system 260 radially. Because the line of focus of the balloon reflector antenna 220 can be any radius of the spherical balloon 240, the antenna beam is easily steered through large angles without degradation. If the reflective surface 244 encompasses nearly an entire hemisphere of the balloon reflector antenna 220, the antenna beam may be steered at angles 30 degrees.
[0025] When the balloon reflector antenna 220 receives a signal (e.g., from the ground), the signal passes through the transparent surface 242 and encounters the reflective surface 244, which focuses the signal into the feed system 260. When the balloon reflector antenna 220 transmits a signal (e.g., to the ground), the signal is emitted by the feed system 260 and encounters the reflective surface 244, which directs the signal through the transparent surface 242. In one embodiment, a balloon reflector antenna 220 with a 1 meter diameter reflective surface 244 yields a 2 degree beam at X-band frequencies (i.e., 8.0 to 12.0 gigahertz). At an altitude of 450 kilometers, the beamwidth on the ground from the 1 meter balloon reflector antenna 220 is approximately 10 miles. At X-band frequencies, the support uplink and downlink data rates of the balloon reflector antenna 220 are between 3 and 50 megabits per second (or more, depending on balloon reflector diameter and transmitter power) for Ethernet-like connections. In addition to X-band communications, the balloon reflector antenna 220 may provide high bandwidth communications at other frequencies (e.g., W-band, V-band, Ka-band, Ku-band, K-band, C-band, S-band, or L-band frequencies).
[0026] The motorized mount 262 enables the beam to be steered without rotating the entire satellite 200. In one embodiment, the beam can be precisely steered over a 150 mile radius by pivoting the feed system 260.
[0027] The transparent surface 242 may be any flexible material with a low absorption rate (e.g., less than 1 percent) at the wavelength of interest. For example, the transparent surface 242 may be a flexible polymer such as an approximately 0.5 mil thick Mylar skin (e.g., a 0.5 mil1 mil Mylar skin). The roughness of the transparent surface 242 may be less than or equal to 1/30 the wavelength of interest.
[0028] The reflective surface 244 may be any suitable material that reflects electromagnetic waves at the wavelength of interest. For example, the reflective surface 244 may be an approximately 0.5 micron (e.g., 0.5 micron 0.1 micron) metallic coating applied the material that forms the transparent surface 242. Because the transparent surface 242 is thin and transparent, the metallic coating may be applied to the inside surface or the outside surface of the balloon 240 to form the reflective surface 244. The metallic coating is applied to an area on one hemisphere of the balloon reflector antenna 220. The reflective surface 244 may be almost an entire hemisphere of the balloon reflector antenna 220 opposite the transparent surface 242.
[0029] NASA deployed metalized balloon satellites from 1960 through 1966. Known as Project Echo, Passive Communications Satellite (PasComSat or OV1-8), and Passive Geodetic Earth Orbiting Satellite (PAGEOS), the satellites functioned merely as reflectors that, when placed in low Earth orbit, would reflect signals from one point on the Earth's surface to another. Unlike the previous metalized balloon satellites, the balloon reflector antenna 220 uses the interior surface of the sphere to form a hemispherical antenna.
[0030] The balloon reflector antenna 220 may be combined with convention satellite components to form the satellite 200. For example, the RF module 284 may send or receive signals via the feed system 260. The RF module 284 may be electrically connected to the feed system 260 through a flexible, low-loss coaxial cable, a microstrip/slot line, etc. The telecommunications module 286 may include conventional satellite communications equipment to enable the satellite 200 to receive command and control signals via the balloon reflector antenna 220. The pitch wheel 288 and the roll wheel 289 control the attitude of the satellite 200. The power module 290 stores power in a battery received from the solar panels 292, which may provide approximately 80 watts of peak power.
[0031] In one embodiment, the RF module 284, the telecommunications module 286, the pitch wheel 288, the roll wheel 289, and the power module 290 may be CubeSat units. A CubeSat is a miniaturized satellite made up of multiples of 101011.35 cm cubic units. CubeSats have a mass of no more than 1.33 kilograms per unit, and often use commercial off-the-shelf components for their electronics and structure. The balloon reflector antenna 220 also provides aerodynamic stability to the satellite 200. For example, the modules (e.g., CubeSat modules) may be oriented in the direction of travel such that articles in the atmosphere wrap around the balloon and stabilize the satellite 200.
[0032]
[0033] For small satellites, it is often harder to meet the volume constraint than it is to meet the mass constraint. Unlike conventional parabolic antennas, the diameter of the balloon reflector antenna 220 is unrelated to the volume of the balloon reflector antenna 220 when stowed for launch. As a result, a collapsed balloon reflector antenna 220 can fit into otherwise unused space within the structure of a small satellite 200. In one embodiment, for example, a small (e.g., 1-2 meter) balloon reflector antenna 220 can stow in one or more 1U CubeSat units. In another embodiment, a large (e.g., 10 meter) balloon reflector antenna 220 and associated RF payload can easily fit into existing rocket fairings.
[0034] Referring back to
[0035]
[0036]
[0037] In one embodiment, the second balloon reflector antenna 520 receives a signal (e.g., from a first point on the ground) and the first balloon reflector antenna 220 retransmits that signal (e.g., to a second point on the ground) to provide point-to-point communication. The satellite 500 may shift the signal from an uplink frequency to downlink frequency. Additionally or alternatively, the satellite 500 may use onboard processing to demodulate, decode, re-encode and modulate the signal. In a second embodiment, the second balloon reflector antenna 520 captures images via synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and the first balloon reflector antenna 220 transmits those images (e.g., to the ground).
[0038] The foregoing description and drawings should be considered as illustrative only of the principles of the inventive concept. Exemplary embodiments may be realized in a variety of sizes and are not intended to be limited by the preferred embodiments described above. Numerous applications of exemplary embodiments will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Therefore, it is not desired to limit the inventive concept to the specific examples disclosed or the exact construction and operation shown and described. Rather, all suitable modifications and equivalents may be resorted to, falling within the scope of this application.