A flush-mounted leaky-wave antenna with predictable patterns
- 1 October 1959
- journal article
- Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation
- Vol. 7 (4) , 320-329
- https://doi.org/10.1109/tap.1959.1144703
Abstract
This paper describes the design and the measured performance of a large, flat antenna consisting of an inductive grid spaced over a conducting surface. The analysis employs the transverse-resonance method to determine the radiating properties of the structure. This analytical technique is shown to predict very accurately the amplitude and phase of the illumination along the aperture of the antenna. An antenna was built with an 18- by 24-inch aperture and tested over the frequency band from 7-to-13 kmc. The results of these tests confirm the theoretical predictions in every detail. A pencil beam from the antenna scans in the H-plane (perpendicular to the antenna) from20\degto60\degfrom the normal to the aperture as the frequency changes from 7-to-13 kmc. The H-plane beamwidth remains virtually constant over most of this band. The first H-plane sidelobe or shoulder is at least 29 db below the main lobe from 7-to-10 kmc, and at least 23 db below from 10-to-13 kmc. All H-plane sidelobes beyond three or four beamwidths on either side of the main lobe are at least 40 db below the main lobe everywhere in the 7-to-13 kmc band. At the design frequency the measured pattern agrees with the theoretical pattern within a fraction of a db down to 40 db below the peak of the main lobe, even though the gain of the antenna at this frequency is only 33 db.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- On field representations in terms of leaky modes or EigenmodesIEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, 1956
- REFLECTION FROM A WIRE GRID PARALLEL TO A CONDUCTING PLANECanadian Journal of Physics, 1954
- Surface impedance of an infinite parallel-wire grid at oblique angles of incidenceJournal of the Institution of Electrical Engineers - Part IIIA: Radiolocation, 1946