Title :
Moment method design of a large S/X band corrugated horn
Author :
Flodin, J. ; Kildal, P. ; Kishk, A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Microwave Technol., Chalmers Univ. of Technol., Goteborg, Sweden
Abstract :
The design of a dual frequency corrugated horn, working at S- and X-band simultaneously, is presented. The horn was designed to feed the 20 m radio telescope at the Onsala Space Observatory (a classical Cassegrain), via two feed reflectors. The feed system is intended for geodetic measurements using very long baseline interferometry (VLBI). Large corrugated horns are mainly designed by using software based on mode matching. The moment method (MM) for bodies of revolution (BOR) has successfully been used to design small corrugated horns. The design of large horn antennas using MM for BOR is difficult because of the large memory requirements. Internal resonances may also occur and give incorrect results. These resonances are difficult to distinguish from actual performance problems. However, the paper shows that it is possible to identify the internal resonances by scanning the frequency and thereby it is possible to design even large horns, using the MM for BOR.
Keywords :
astronomical observatories; electrical engineering; electrical engineering computing; horn antennas; method of moments; radioastronomical techniques; radiotelescopes; radiowave interferometry; reflector antenna feeds; reflector antennas; 10 m; Cassegrain antenna; Onsala Space Observatory; VLBI; bodies of revolution; dual frequency corrugated horn; feed reflectors; feed system; frequency scanning; geodetic measurements; internal resonances; large S/X band corrugated horn; memory requirements; moment method design; radio telescope; very long baseline interferometry; Antenna measurements; Design methodology; Feeds; Frequency; Moment methods; Observatories; Optical design; Radio astronomy; Radio interferometry; Resonance;
Conference_Titel :
Antennas and Propagation Society International Symposium, 1996. AP-S. Digest
Conference_Location :
Baltimore, MD, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3216-4
DOI :
10.1109/APS.1996.550006