Author_Institution :
202 W. Interlacken Drive, Phoenix, AZ, USA
Abstract :
The use of flat sections to approximate a paraboloidal reflector have been developed for satellite antennas to facilitate their deployment in space. To that end, reflectors using both hexagonal and triangular segmentation have been developed. Segmented reflectors could be useful for low cost, light weight, and easily erected satellite Earth terminal or TVRO antennas. To make such antennas cost effective, one would like to minimize the number of flat sections required to obtain a satisfactory radiation pattern envelope (RPE) as prescribed by the CCIR standard. Analyses by Anderson and Wu (1984) for triangular, by Brown (see IEEE AP-S Intl. Sym., Newport Beach, CA, p.1186-9, 1995) for hexagonal, and by Brown and Kahn for square segmentations show significant grating lobe problems, even for small flat sections (/spl lambda//16 vertex error or less). This occurs because there is a periodic segmentation pattern (when projected on an aperture plane perpendicular to the axis of the paraboloid) that extends across the entire face of the reflector. A number of methods for breaking up this periodicity are presented.
Keywords :
antenna radiation patterns; receiving antennas; reflector antennas; satellite antennas; satellite ground stations; television antennas; CCIR standard; TVRO antennas; aperture plane; flat sections; grating lobe problems; hexagonal segmentation; irregular segmentation; paraboloidal reflector; paraboloidal reflectors; periodic segmentation pattern; radiation pattern envelope; satellite Earth terminal; satellite antennas; segmented reflectors; triangular segmentation; vertex error; Antenna radiation patterns; Apertures; Costs; Gratings; Integral equations; Magnetic confinement; Reflector antennas; Satellite antennas; Satellite broadcasting; Satellite ground stations;