COMPACT MULTIFREQUENCY DUAL-POLARIZATION RADIOFREQUENCY EXCITER FOR A PRIMARY ANTENNA SOURCE AND A PRIMARY ANTENNA SOURCE EQUIPPED WITH SUCH A RADIOFREQUENCY EXCITER
20170346189 · 2017-11-30
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04B1/38
ELECTRICITY
H01Q5/40
ELECTRICITY
H01P1/161
ELECTRICITY
H01Q1/52
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01Q5/40
ELECTRICITY
H01Q1/52
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A radiofrequency exciter comprises a junction including an axial access intended to be connected to a horn antenna, at least four lateral accesses and at least four frequency filters that are associated with the four lateral accesses, respectively, the junction including, in series, a first coupling cavity equipped with two coupling slots that are able to sample a vertical polarization, and a second coupling cavity equipped with two coupling slots that are able to sample a horizontal polarization, the four frequency filters being connected directly to the four respective coupling slots, the first coupling cavity having a transverse cross-section having a constant vertical dimension and a horizontal dimension that decreases between the axial access and a transverse exit aperture of the first coupling cavity.
Claims
1. A compact multifrequency dual-linear-polarization radiofrequency exciter, comprising of a waveguide junction extending parallelly to a longitudinal axis and including an axial access intended to be connected to a horn antenna, at least four lateral accesses and at least four frequency filters that are associated with the four lateral accesses, respectively, the junction including, in series, a first coupling cavity equipped with two coupling slots that are able to sample a vertical polarization by magnetic or electric coupling, and a second coupling cavity equipped with two coupling slots that are able to sample a horizontal polarization by magnetic or electric coupling, the four frequency filters being connected directly to the four respective slots for coupling the two, vertical and horizontal, polarizations, the first coupling cavity having an internal transverse cross-section having a constant vertical dimension and a horizontal dimension that decreases between the axial access and a transverse exit aperture of the first coupling cavity.
2. The radiofrequency exciter according to claim 1, wherein the lateral filters connected to the two slots for coupling the vertical polarization are a first filter centred on an emission first frequency band and a second filter centred on a reception second frequency band, respectively, and wherein the lateral filters connected to the two slots for coupling the horizontal polarization are a third filter centred on the emission first frequency band and a fourth filter centred on the reception second frequency band, respectively.
3. The radiofrequency exciter according to claim 2, wherein the second coupling cavity has an internal transverse cross-section having a constant horizontal dimension and a vertical dimension that decreases between an entrance aperture and an exit aperture of the second coupling cavity.
4. The radiofrequency exciter according to claim 3, wherein the two slots for coupling the vertical polarization are parallel to each other and arranged, radially opposite, in peripheral walls of the first coupling cavity, and wherein the two slots for coupling the horizontal polarization are parallel to each other and placed radially opposite in peripheral walls of the second coupling cavity.
5. The radiofrequency exciter according to claim 2, wherein the waveguide junction further includes a third cavity for decoupling the two, horizontal and vertical, linear polarizations, the decoupling third cavity being located between the first coupling cavity and the second coupling cavity and having an internal transverse cross-section of constant horizontal and vertical dimensions.
6. The radiofrequency exciter according to claim 5, wherein the decoupling third cavity has a length comprised between zero and one quarter of the average wavelength guided in the emission frequency band.
7. The radiofrequency exciter according to claim 1, wherein the axial access has a circular cross-section and the transverse exit aperture of the first coupling cavity has an elliptical cross-section, the ellipse having a major axis oriented parallelly to the vertical dimension and a minor axis oriented parallelly to the horizontal dimension
8. The radiofrequency exciter according to claim 7, wherein the transverse entrance aperture of the second coupling cavity has an elliptical cross-section and the transverse exit aperture of the second coupling cavity has a circular cross-section.
9. The radiofrequency exciter according to claim 1, wherein the axial access has a square cross-section and the transverse exit aperture of the first coupling cavity has a rectangular cross-section, the rectangle having a large side oriented parallelly to the vertical dimension and a small side oriented parallelly to the horizontal dimension.
10. The radiofrequency exciter according to claim 3, wherein the transverse cross-section of the first coupling cavity and of the second coupling cavity decreases continually or in successive steps.
11. The radiofrequency exciter according to claim 10, comprising a plurality of waveguide junctions connected in series.
12. A primary antenna source comprising a radiofrequency exciter according to claim 1.
13. The primary source according to claim 12, further comprising a polarizer connected to the axial access of the radiofrequency exciter.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0022] Other particularities and advantages of the invention will become clearly apparent from the rest of the description, which is given, by way of purely illustrative and nonlimiting example, with reference to the appended schematic drawings, which show:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0031] The radiofrequency exciter 5 shown in the schematic diagram in
[0032] The junction 10 includes two different coupling cavities 1, 2 that are arranged successively in series in the longitudinal direction Z, and that are dedicated to separating and sampling the two, vertical V and horizontal H, respectively, linear polarizations, respectively. The two, horizontal and vertical, polarizations are sampled through dedicated coupling slots. The two slots 31, 32 for sampling the vertical polarization V are parallel to each other and arranged, symmetrically and radially opposite, through the peripheral walls of the first coupling cavity 1. The two slots 33, 34 for coupling the horizontal polarization H are parallel to each other and arranged, symmetrically and radially opposite, through peripheral walls of the second coupling cavity 2. The orientation of the coupling slots may be parallel or perpendicular to the longitudinal direction Z corresponding to the propagation direction of the radiofrequency waves in the junction 10. In the case where the coupling slots are oriented parallelly to the longitudinal direction Z, as shown in the example in
[0033] The first coupling cavity 1 includes a transverse entrance aperture formed by the axial access 15 and a transverse exit aperture 16 connected to a transverse entrance aperture 17 of the second coupling cavity 2. The first coupling cavity 1 equipped with its two coupling slots 31, 32 dedicated to sampling the vertical polarization, has an internal transverse cross-section having a constant vertical dimension but a horizontal dimension that decreases between the entrance aperture 15 and the exit aperture 16 of the first coupling cavity. Since the horizontal direction of the internal transverse cross-section of the first coupling cavity 1 decreases, the two polarizations H and V see the exit aperture 16 in the form of a vertically oriented slot. However, as a slot lets pass an electric field oriented parallelly to its small sides, the horizontal narrowing of the internal transverse cross-section forms a short-circuit plane for the signal component of vertical polarization V, which is then reflected and sampled by the two coupling slots 31, 32 of the first coupling cavity 1. In contrast, the signal component of H polarization does not encounter the short-circuit plane, and passes through the first coupling cavity and continues to propagate freely toward the second coupling cavity 2. For example, as shown in
[0034] To separate the two frequency bands i.e. the emission frequency band Tx and the reception frequency band Rx, the two slots 31, 32 for coupling the vertical polarization V are connected to a first filter 11 centred on an emission first frequency band Tx and rejecting frequencies outside this first frequency band, and to a second filter 12 centred on a reception second frequency band Rx and rejecting frequencies outside this second frequency band, respectively. Thus, the first coupling cavity 1 includes, connected to the output of the first filter 11, a first lateral access 21 operating in vertical polarization V and in the emission first frequency band Tx and, connected to the output of the second filter 12, the first coupling cavity 1 includes a second lateral access 22 operating in vertical polarization V and in the reception second frequency band Rx.
[0035] The second coupling cavity 2 includes an entrance aperture 17 connected to the exit aperture 16 of the first coupling cavity 1 and an exit 18 able to be connected to a terminal wall of the junction 10 or, as shown in the schematic diagram in
[0036] Alternatively, the second coupling cavity 2 may have an internal transverse cross-section of constant horizontal and vertical dimensions, but in this case the coupled bandwidth will be lower.
[0037] Advantageously, as shown in the various exemplary embodiments illustrated in
[0038] Advantageously, as shown in
[0039] As shown in
[0040] As shown in
[0041] Although the invention was described with reference to particular embodiments, it is clearly obvious that it is in no way limited thereto and that it comprises all the technical equivalents of the described means and their combinations if they fall within the scope of the invention.