CORRUGATED FEED HORN FOR PRODUCING AN OVAL BEAM
20180191076 ยท 2018-07-05
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A corrugated feed horn for antenna has an oval pattern of corrugations, and a series of intermediate ridges spaced between adjacent corrugation ridges only in the regions of the slots near its major axis. The intermediate ridges provide a feed horn that is capable of producing a relatively uniform oval beam, and has enough corrugations per wavelength to guarantee little diffraction on the edges of the horn, thus resulting in an antenna with very low side lobes.
Claims
1. A feed horn for an antenna comprising: a tubular waveguide extending along a central projection axis leading to an aperture; a plurality of corrugations extending outward from the projection axis around the aperture in a nested non-circular pattern of curved corrugation ridges having a major axis and a minor axis; said corrugation ridges rising parallel to the projection axis and being separated by slots; and intermediate ridges spaced between the corrugation ridges only adjacent to the major axis.
2. The feed horn of claim 1 wherein said intermediate ridges are interstitially spaced in the slots between the corrugation ridges near the major axis.
3. The feed horn of claim 1 wherein the corrugation ridges are substantially oval.
4. The feed horn of claim 1 wherein the corrugation ridges are substantially elliptical.
5. The feed horn of claim 1 wherein the intermediate ridges have ends spatially separated from the corrugation ridges.
6. The feed horn of claim 1 wherein the intermediate ridges have heights between the heights of the adjacent corrugation ridges.
7. The feed horn of claim 1 wherein the intermediate ridges are curved to approximate the shape of the corrugation ridges.
8. The feed horn of claim 1 wherein the intermediate ridges maintain a substantially uniform slot width along the major and minor axes.
9. The feed horn of claim 1 wherein the corrugated ridges have different semi-flare angles around the circumference of the aperture.
10. A feed horn for an antenna comprising: a tubular waveguide extending along a central projection axis leading to an aperture; a plurality of corrugations extending outward from the projection axis around the aperture in a nested pattern of elliptical corrugation ridges having a major axis and a minor axis; said corrugation ridges rising parallel to the projection axis and having wider spacings between corrugation ridges adjacent to the major axis than the minor axis; and intermediate ridges spaced between the corrugation ridges only in the regions of the slots adjacent to the major axis and being separated by slots, said intermediate ridges and corrugation ridges defining slots adjacent to the major axis having widths substantially the same as the slots between adjacent corrugation ridges adjacent to the minor axis.
11. The feed horn of claim 10 wherein said intermediate ridges are interstitially spaced in the slots between the corrugation ridges near the major axis.
12. The feed horn of claim 10 wherein the intermediate ridges have ends spatially separated from the corrugation ridges.
13. The feed horn of claim 10 wherein the intermediate ridges have heights between the heights of the adjacent corrugation ridges.
14. The feed horn of claim 10 wherein the intermediate ridges are curved to approximate the shape of the corrugation ridges.
15. The feed horn of claim 10 wherein the corrugated ridges have different semi-flare angles around the circumference of the aperture.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011] The present invention can be more readily understood in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0022]
[0023] It should understood that the term oval as used herein is not limited to shapes meeting the precise mathematical criteria of a true ellipse. This term should be broadly construed to include other rounded, non-circular shapes, such as a race track, a rounded rectangle, other symmetric or asymmetric rounded shapes, and the like.
[0024] When viewed from the front of the horn 10 as shown in
[0025] A series of intermediate ridges 30 are spaced between the corrugation ridges 20 in the regions of the slots 25 adjacent to the major axis 40, but not adjacent to minor axis 45, as shown in
[0026] The intermediate ridges 30 can be curved to approximate the shape of the corrugation ridges 20. Space can be left between the ends of the intermediate ridges 30 and the adjacent corrugation ridges 20, as shown in
[0027] The heights of the intermediate ridges 30 can be chosen to be the same as the adjacent corrugation ridge 20 closer to the center axis 15, as shown in
[0028] It should be noted that present feed horn 10 has different semi-flare angles 50 around the circumference of the aperture (i.e., the semi-flare angle varies as it sweeps around the circumference of the aperture). But, by careful adjustment of width, depth, and height of the corrugations 20, 25 and intermediate ridges 30, it is possible to achieve a very smooth oval beam, resulting in very low side lobes of the antenna it is used with.
[0029] The above disclosure sets forth a number of embodiments of the present invention described in detail with respect to the accompanying drawings. Those skilled in this art will appreciate that various changes, modifications, other structural arrangements, and other embodiments could be practiced under the teachings of the present invention without departing from the scope of this invention as set forth in the following claims.