Antenna radomes forming a cut-off pattern
10270160 ยท 2019-04-23
Assignee
Inventors
- Dmitry Vitalievich Tatarnikov (Moscow, RU)
- Alexey Anatolievich Generalov (Moscow, RU)
- IVAN MIROSLAVOVICH CHERNETSKIY (Moscow, RU)
Cpc classification
H01Q1/42
ELECTRICITY
H01Q15/006
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01Q1/42
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An antenna system includes a circularly-polarized antenna element with a Down/Up ratio in a proximity of a local horizon of no better than 12 dB. An antenna radome encloses the antenna element, the radome providing a drop of antenna pattern near a local horizon and having an upper transparent area and a lower semi-transparent area. The semi-transparent area is has a generally hemispherical shape. The semi-transparent area includes a circular metallized portion with vertical and horizontal slots, the metallized portion extending part of the way downward from an equator of the generally hemispherical shape. The metallized portion includes passive discrete electrical elements connected across at least some of the slots. The metallized portion can include multiple areas having different degrees of transparence. Each such area has a specified impedance. The discrete elements are capacitors, inductors and/or resistors. The metallized portion can have a plurality of circular rows separated by the horizontal slots.
Claims
1. An antenna system comprising: a circularly-polarized antenna element with a Down/Up ratio between 0 and 12 relative to a local horizon of no better than 12 dB, and an antenna radome providing a Down/Up ratio of 20 dB or better starting from 12 and having transparent and semi-transparent areas, the transparent area being above the semi-transparent area.
2. The antenna system of claim 1, wherein the semi-transparent area contains multiple parts having different degrees of transparence.
3. The antenna system of claim 2, wherein each part of the semi-transparent area includes a set of slots with a specified impedance.
4. The antenna system of claim 3, wherein the semi-transparent area can comprise a set of vertical slots and a set of horizontal slots.
5. The antenna system of claim 4, wherein the radome includes a plurality of discrete elements providing the specified impedance.
6. The antenna system of claim 5, wherein the discrete elements include any of capacitors, inductors, resistors, connected in series and/or in parallel.
7. The antenna system of claim 1, wherein the semi-transparent area has a plurality of layers, each layer having a set of vertical slots and a set of horizontal slots.
8. An antenna system comprising: a circularly-polarized antenna element with a Down/Up ratio between 0 and 12 relative to a local horizon of no better than 12 dB, and an antenna radome enclosing the antenna element, the radome providing a Down/Up ratio of 20 dB or better starting from 12 and having an upper transparent area and a lower semi-transparent area, wherein the semi-transparent area is has a generally hemispherical shape, and wherein the semi-transparent area includes a circular metallized portion with vertical and horizontal slots, the metallized portion extending part of the way downward from an equator of the generally hemispherical shape, and wherein the metallized portion includes passive discrete elements connected across at least some of the slots, and wherein the metallized portion has a plurality of circular rows separated by the horizontal slots.
9. The antenna system of claim 8, wherein the metallized portion includes multiple areas having different degrees of transparence.
10. The antenna system of claim 9, wherein each area of the metallized portion has a specified impedance.
11. The antenna system of claim 8, wherein the discrete elements include any of capacitors, inductors, resistors, connected in series and/or in parallel.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE ATTACHED FIGURES
(1) The accompanying drawings, which are included to provide a further understanding of the invention and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and together with the description serve to explain the principles of the invention.
(2) In the drawings:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(19) Reference will now be made in detail to the preferred embodiments of the present invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
(20) As shown in
(21) The radome includes two segmentsa semi-transparent segment 21 and transparent segment 22. The semi-transparent segment 21 is made of semi-transparent material. Semi-transparency here means the property of partial reflection and partial passing-through of electromagnet radiation. Numerical characteristics of such materials and a method of their implementation is given below. The transparent segment 22 is made of radio-transparent material, for example, thin dielectric with permeability close to 1. The transparent segment 22 is located above the semi-transparent one 21.
(22) According to
(23) A spherically shaped embodiment of the radome design is further described. A semi-transparent segment of the radome is a part of a sphere with radius R and center at point C. It includes two parts. The first part211is formed by an arc starting from the vertical axis and characterized by radius R and angle .sub.1. This part is made of nontransparent material that fully reflects or partly absorbs (with an angular dependency) electromagnetic radiation.
(24) The second part of the semi-transparent segment 212 is formed by an arc of radius R, which starts at angle .sub.1 and ends at angle .sub.2. Angular dimension of the arc is .sub.2.sub.1. Angle .sub.2 can take values greater than or equal to .sub.1. If the angles are the same, there is no semi-transparent surface in the design.
(25) A transparent segment of the radome design 22 is located on an arc, which, together with the arcs of the semi-transparent segment 21, form a half of circle such that a sphere can be formed by rotating said arcs about the vertical axis. The segment is made of radio-transparent material. A criterion of referring to transparent, semi-transparent and nontransparent quality of a surface is given below.
(26) Interaction of electromagnetic waves with semi-transparent surfaces can be characterized by a parameter called the layer impedance and designated by Z.sub.S. The impedance can be presented in the form of a sum Z.sub.S=R.sub.S+iX.sub.S, where R.sub.S, X.sub.S are active and reactive parts correspondingly. At X.sub.S>0 impedance is inductive. At X.sub.S<0, the impedance is capacitive. Components R.sub.S, X.sub.S are conveniently measured in relative units, fractions of the universal constant W.sub.0=120 Ohm (which is the free-space characteristic impedance). When |Z.sub.S|>>W.sub.0, the surface can be regarded as fully transparent. When |Z.sub.S|<<W.sub.0 the surface is regarded as nontransparent, fully reflecting electromagnetic waves similar to metals. When R.sub.S0, the surface partly absorbs electromagnetic waves. By selecting the desired layer impedance one can provide a required degree of passing electromagnetic radiation, its reflection and absorption, thereby affecting the interference mode of fields being passed-through and diffracted. When |Z.sub.S|W.sub.0, the surface is considered semi-transparent.
(27) Antennas used in satellite positioning operate mainly in receiving mode, but in many cases it is practical to consider their characteristics in passing-through mode. The identity of antenna characteristics both in receiving and passing-through modes is proved by the reciprocity principle.
(28) Calculations were done for a two-dimensional problem of diffracting a source field on a cylindrical surface of a certain radius R. The radiation of the source was assumed to be uniform in the range of angles 0, and in the range of <0 the radiation was suppressed. AP and Down/Up ratio for such a source are presented in
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are given in
(30) Radome design shown in
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(33) Both lumped and shared-circuit elements can be used as capacitors, resistors and inductors. Nominal values of these elements are selected based on the condition of suppressing field interference in the lower hemisphere at the required bandwidth.
(34) The width of slots is defined by a convenient installation of elements containing resistors, inductors and capacitors. For example, for lumped elements the width of the slot is determined by the size of the corresponding components.
(35) The semi-transparent area can include several layers. The structure of each layer corresponds to the structure of semi-transparent surfaces shown in
(36) Below there are parameters of one radome embodiment, the use of which enable to reach DU() ratio better than 20 dB starting from angle =12 in the lower hemisphere relative to the horizon.
R=2,.sub.1=0.52,.sub.2=0.74,Z.sub.S=i0.5W.sub.0,
(37) where R is the radius of the spherical radome, .sub.1, .sub.2 are the angles in terms of
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(41) Having thus described a preferred embodiment, it should be apparent to those skilled in the art that certain advantages of the described method and system have been achieved. It should also be appreciated that various modifications, adaptations, and alternative embodiments thereof may be made within the scope and spirit of the present invention. The invention is further defined by the following claims.