DocumentCode
1039069
Title
A further study of the patterns of single slots on circular conducting cylinders
Author
Sensiper, S. ; Sterns, W.G. ; Taylor, T.T.
Author_Institution
Hughes Aircraft Company, Culver City, CA, USA
fYear
1952
fDate
8/1/1952 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
240
Lastpage
250
Abstract
The azimuthal patterns of both axial and circumferential slots on circular conducting cylinders have been carefully calculated in both magnitude and phase and some experimental checks have been obtained. The calculated patterns show that in the semicircle over which the slot is optically visible, the magnitude, and particularly the phase, of the patterns, are very similar to those, of a similarly situated slot in an infinite ground plane. This conclusion has significant implications in the design of an antenna involving several slots on a cylinder. On the semicircle over which the slot is optically invisible, and partioularly near the mid-point of this range, the pattern is very well represented by
where
is the value of the pattern at
(the point opposite the slot) and
is complex. Thus the field of either one of the rear quadrants resembles the voltage of an open-circuited lossy transmission line. The implications of the above-noted form of the field pattern behind the slot led to the consideration of an expression for the field which is quite different from the usual one originally employed. By an exact transformation of the usual expression it is possible to show that the far field is given by the expansion
, where
is complex. Near
, the first term of this series is dominant, and the results of this approach agree with those noted above. The procedure and its significance are quite closely related to the problem of electromagnetic wave propagation over a sphere, which has been of considerable interest for some time. The various aspects of the cylindrical problem are discussed in some detail.
where
is the value of the pattern at
(the point opposite the slot) and
is complex. Thus the field of either one of the rear quadrants resembles the voltage of an open-circuited lossy transmission line. The implications of the above-noted form of the field pattern behind the slot led to the consideration of an expression for the field which is quite different from the usual one originally employed. By an exact transformation of the usual expression it is possible to show that the far field is given by the expansion
, where
is complex. Near
, the first term of this series is dominant, and the results of this approach agree with those noted above. The procedure and its significance are quite closely related to the problem of electromagnetic wave propagation over a sphere, which has been of considerable interest for some time. The various aspects of the cylindrical problem are discussed in some detail.Keywords
Cylindrical antennas; Slot antennas; Art; Cities and towns; Geometry; Laboratories; Marine vehicles; Optical losses; Research and development; Silver; Voltage;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Antennas and Propagation, Transactions of the IRE Professional Group on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
2168-0639
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/T-AP.1952.28046
Filename
1144269
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