(19)
(11)EP 3 270 463 B1

(12)EUROPEAN PATENT SPECIFICATION

(45)Mention of the grant of the patent:
16.02.2022 Bulletin 2022/07

(21)Application number: 17176140.6

(22)Date of filing:  14.06.2017
(51)International Patent Classification (IPC): 
H01Q 21/06(2006.01)
H01Q 19/10(2006.01)
H01Q 25/00(2006.01)
H01Q 1/28(2006.01)
H01Q 19/17(2006.01)
H04B 7/204(2006.01)
(52)Cooperative Patent Classification (CPC):
H01Q 1/288; H04B 7/2041; H01Q 25/007; H01Q 19/17; H01Q 21/064; H01Q 21/067; H01Q 19/10

(54)

IMAGING ARRAY FED REFLECTOR

BILDGEBUNGSARRAY-GESPEISTER REFLEKTOR

RÉFLECTEUR ALIMENTÉ PAR RÉSEAU D'IMAGERIE


(84)Designated Contracting States:
AL AT BE BG CH CY CZ DE DK EE ES FI FR GB GR HR HU IE IS IT LI LT LU LV MC MK MT NL NO PL PT RO RS SE SI SK SM TR

(30)Priority: 11.07.2016 US 201662360840 P
21.02.2017 US 201715438620

(43)Date of publication of application:
17.01.2018 Bulletin 2018/03

(73)Proprietor: Space Systems / Loral LLC
Palo Alto, California 94303 (US)

(72)Inventors:
  • BURR, Douglas G.
    San Jose, California 95123 (US)
  • TABATABAEI, Seyed A.
    Mountain View, California 94040 (US)
  • SOWERS, James J.
    Sunnyvale, California 94087 (US)
  • GELON, Walter S.
    Redwood City, California 94065 (US)
  • SIMON, Peter S.
    Camarillo, California 93012 (US)

(74)Representative: Beck Greener LLP 
Fulwood House 12 Fulwood Place
London WC1V 6HR
London WC1V 6HR (GB)


(56)References cited: : 
EP-A2- 1 020 950
US-A- 3 936 835
US-A1- 2003 076 274
US-A1- 2010 309 050
US-A1- 2015 061 930
WO-A1-2016/094786
US-A- 4 236 161
US-A1- 2009 262 037
US-A1- 2011 267 251
US-A1- 2015 295 640
  
      
    Note: Within nine months from the publication of the mention of the grant of the European patent, any person may give notice to the European Patent Office of opposition to the European patent granted. Notice of opposition shall be filed in a written reasoned statement. It shall not be deemed to have been filed until the opposition fee has been paid. (Art. 99(1) European Patent Convention).


    Description


    [0001] The present disclosure relates generally to satellite antennas, and particularly to an imaging array fed reflector for a high throughput satellite payload.

    [0002] The assignee of the present invention manufactures and deploys spacecraft for, inter alia, communications and broadcast services. Market demands for such spacecraft have imposed increasingly stringent requirements on spacecraft payloads. For example, broadband service providers desire spacecraft with increased data rate capacity at higher EIRP through each of an increased number of user spot beans operable from geosynchronous orbit altitudes in communication with small (< 1 meter aperture) user terminals.

    [0003] A multi-beam antenna (MBA) system generates a set of user spot beams that define a coverage area which may extend, in aggregate, across a large region on the ground. MBAs providing wide-band communications services from a geosynchronous satellite conventionally provide contiguous coverage of a region with a triangular lattice of overlapping circular antenna beams. These beams are conventionally formed using clusters of radiating elements configured as circular feed horns, also centered on a triangular lattice.

    [0004] An objective of an MBA system is to maximize beam forming efficiency, measured as gain area product (GAP) of the MBA divided by 4π steradians (41,253 square degrees). GAP = Gave*Acov, where Gave is the average gain over coverage area, Acov, with Acov expressed in square degrees. Known MBA systems provide a GAP of 10000-16000 and, therefore, a beam forming efficiency in the range of 24% to 39%. See: Han, C.C., etal., "Satellite Antennas", Antenna Handbook, volume 3, chapter 21, edited by Lo, Y.T., etal., ISBN 0-442-01594-1 (hereinafter, "Han").

    [0005] US2015295640A1 discloses a spacecraft that includes a payload subsystem, the payload subsystem including a phased array of feed elements configured to illuminate an antenna reflector, a beam forming network (BFN) disposed proximate to the array of feed elements, and a plurality of power amplifiers disposed between the BFN and the array of feed elements. US2009262037A1 discloses an antenna system for generating and distributing power among a plurality of non-focused beams, the system comprises a reflector having a focal plane and a non-parabolic curvature configured to form the defocused beams. US2003076274A1 discloses an antenna array that includes a plurality of periodic or aperiodic arranged sub-arrays.

    [0006] In the absence of the presently disclosed techniques, a single aperture, array fed reflector MBA may share radiating elements between two or more beams, complicating the beamforming and requiring multi-carrier operation. Multi-carrier operation requires linearity which leads to output back-off of the amplifiers and reduced amplifier efficiency with increased power and heat generated for a given output power. Alternatively, an arrangement having a single feed horn per beam with a conventional multi-reflector MBA requires higher power amplifiers and amplifier redundancy, with increased cost and complexity. Moreover, an MBA having a single feed per beam is generally scan limited by reflector offset distortion.

    [0007] Thus, an improved single aperture MBA design is desirable.

    [0008] The systems, methods and devices of this disclosure each have several innovative aspects, no single one of which is solely responsible for the desirable attributes disclosed herein.

    [0009] According to the first aspect of the present invention, there is provided a multi-beam antenna (MBA) system for a spacecraft as set out in the appending independent claim. According to the second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a spacecraft comprising a communications payload subsystem, the payload subsystem including a multi-beam antenna system as set out in the appending independent claim. Features of embodiments are set out in the appending dependent claims.

    Figure 1A illustrates a simplified diagram of a satellite communications network.

    Figure 1B illustrates a simplified block diagram of an example of a satellite payload subsystem.

    Figure 2 illustrates an example of an active phased array for a MBA.

    Figure 3 illustrates a comparison of an arrangement for a beam being associated with seven radiating feed elements (Detail A) with an arrangement for a beam being associated with nineteen radiating feed elements (Detail B) and with an arrangement for a beams associated with thirty-seven radiating feed elements (Detail C).

    Figure 4 illustrates an isometric view of an active phased array using helical antenna elements.

    Figure 5 illustrates an example of interleaving of a number of beams, each beam having nineteen radiating elements.

    Figure 6 illustrates an example implementation of soft redundancy for a seven element beamforming network.

    Figure 7 illustrates a contour plot of MBA directivity with respect to peak directivity. The example illustrated in Fig. 7 is not according to the invention and is present for illustration purposes only.

    Figure 8 illustrates a contour plot of MBA directivity with respect to peak directivity.

    Figure 9 illustrates a contour plot of MBA directivity with respect to peak directivity.

    Figure 10 illustrates a contour plot of MBA directivity with respect to peak directivity.



    [0010] The example illustrated in Fig. 10 is not according to the invention and is present for illustration purposes only.

    [0011] Throughout the drawings, the same reference numerals and characters, unless otherwise stated, are used to denote like features, elements, components, or portions of the illustrated embodiments. Moreover, while the subject invention will now be described in detail with reference to the drawings, the description is done in connection with the illustrative embodiments. It is intended that changes and modifications can be made to the described embodiments without departing from the true scope of the appended claims.

    [0012] Specific exemplary embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings. This invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms, and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art.

    [0013] It will be understood that when a feature is referred to as being "connected" or "coupled" to another feature, it can be directly connected or coupled to the other feature, or intervening features may be present. Furthermore, "connected" or "coupled" as used herein may include wirelessly connected or coupled. It will be understood that although the terms "first" and "second" are used herein to describe various features, these features should not be limited by these terms. These terms are used only to distinguish one feature from another feature. Thus, for example, a first user terminal could be termed a second user terminal, and similarly, a second user terminal may be termed a first user terminal without departing from the teachings of the present invention. As used herein, the term "and/or" includes any and all combinations of one or more of the associated listed items. The symbol "/" is also used as a shorthand notation for "and/or".

    [0014] The terms "spacecraft", "satellite" and "vehicle" may be used interchangeably herein, and generally refer to any orbiting satellite or spacecraft system.

    [0015] Referring to FIG. 1A, a simplified diagram of a satellite communications network 100 is illustrated. The network includes a satellite 111, which may be located, for example, at a geostationary orbital location or in low earth orbit. Satellite 111 may be communicatively coupled, via at least one feeder link antenna 121, to at least one gateway 112 and, via at least one user link antenna 122 to a plurality of user terminals 116. The at least one gateway 112 may be coupled to a network such as, for example, the Internet. Each gateway 112 and the satellite 111 communicate over a feeder link 113, which has both a forward uplink 114 and a return downlink 115. User terminals 116 and the satellite 111 communicate over a user link 117 that has both a forward downlink 118 and a return uplink 119. User link 117 and the feeder link may operate in respective assigned frequency bands, referred to herein as the "user link band" and the "feeder link band."

    [0016] One or more of the feeder link antenna 121 and the user link antenna 122 may include a high efficiency multi-beam antenna (MBA) system of the type disclosed in US9153877. The antenna reflector may be substantially oversized with respect to a reflector conventionally sized to produce a circular beam that is 4-4.5 dB down at the edge of coverage.

    [0017] Referring now to FIG. 1B, a simplified block diagram of a satellite payload subsystem 100B disposed within the satellite 111 is illustrated. The payload subsystem 100B may include receive antenna feeds 105 illuminated by feeder link antenna 121, filters 115, low-noise amplifiers (LNAs) 125, frequency converters, including input local oscillators 135, including output local oscillators 145, amplifiers 150, which may or may not include linearization, and radiating feed elements 165 that illuminate user link antenna 122. In some implementations, the user link antenna 122 may include a reflector.

    [0018] In some implementations, the payload subsystem 100B may include a digital channelizer 170. The digital channelizer 170 may receive analog RF input signals by way of a quantity 'N' of receive ports, where 'N' is greater than or equal to 1. The digital channelizer 170 may enable the payload subsystem 100B to process multiple input signals and to reconfigurably distribute portions of those input signals into multiple output signals and to create reconfigurable channels to route the multiple input signals to multiple output ports. The digital channelizer 170 may include analog-to-digital converters, digital-to-analog converters, control computer(s) with software or firmware, and signal processing electronics (not illustrated). The digital channelizer 170 may forward analog RF output signals by way of a quantity 'M' of transmit ports, where 'M' is greater than or equal to 1. It will be appreciated that quantity 'M' is not necessarily equal to quantity 'N'. The multiple inputs and outputs provide redundancy for the payload 110, in addition to redundancy within the channelizer.

    [0019] The digital channelizer 170 may be capable of operating over all or a substantial part of the bandwidth ranges that are allocated to the payload subsystem 100B. The digital channelizer 170 may sub-divide the uplink frequency spectrum into smaller segments and permit fine bandwidth adjustability in the smaller segments. The digital channelizer 170 may also tune, in fine or coarse increments, responsive to ground and/or onboard commands, the channel center frequency and bandwidth allocated to a particular uplink beam on a communications satellite, in addition to adjusting the frequency response curve and other characteristics of each channel. The digital channelizer 170 may directly handle uplink frequencies and/or downlink frequencies, thus, in some implementations, replacing some or all of the filters 115, the input frequency converters 135 and output frequency converters 145. Other functions of a digital channelizer may include frequency conversion, demodulation, bit detection, and modulation, among others.

    [0020] It is contemplated that a spacecraft payload subsystem may be configured to include a digital channelizer as illustrated in Figure 1B; however, in some implementations the payload subsystem may not include a digital channelizer.

    [0021] In some implementations, each of a large number of beams is formed by a respective dedicated cluster of elements with no element sharing between beams. Figure 2 illustrates an example of an active phased array. In the illustrated implementation, an active phased array 200 is configured to provide forty-two beams, each beam formed by a cluster of seven dedicated radiating elements. For example, beam number 1 is illustrated to be formed by radiating elements located at positions a, b, c, d, e, f and g. It may be observed that each radiating element is associated with a single respective beam. In an implementation, each radiating element is coupled with a respective amplifier module disposed proximate to the radiating element. The beams are arranged in a close packed triangular lattice; likewise, the radiating elements are arranged in a close packed triangular lattice.

    [0022] To facilitate the triangular lattice arrangement, each radiating element and a respective amplifier and related electronics may be arranged so as to be contained within a rectangular footprint area having an aspect ratio of short wall to long wall of

    . Alternatively, each radiating element and a respective amplifier and related electronics may be arranged so as to be contained within a hexagonal footprint area. In either case, the footprint area is, advantageously,

    times the spacing between adjacent elements ("element spacing") squared, in order to maximize packing efficiency. The element spacing may, advantageously, be small, for example less than 3λ. In an implementation, the element spacing is 1.1λ.

    [0023] In the arrangement illustrated in Figure 2, each beam is associated with seven radiating feed elements. Figure 3 illustrates a comparison of an arrangement for a beam being associated with seven radiating feed elements (Detail A) with an arrangement for a beam being associated with nineteen radiating feed elements (Detail B) and with an arrangement for a beams associated with thirty-seven radiating feed elements (Detail C).

    [0024] Figure 4 illustrates an isometric view of an active phased array for a single beam including nineteen beamlets using helical radiating feed elements, according to an implementation. The active phased array 400 includes nineteen radiating feed elements 401 arranged in a triangular lattice, and may be configured to form a single beam. Advantageously, radiating feed element spacing may be electrically small (e.g., typically, 1.1λ). The radiating element may be chosen to provide maximum aperture efficiency in the regime where the element spacing is less than 2λ. Examples of radiating feed elements suitable for operation with the disclosed techniques may include end fire elements. For example a radiating element may be configured as a cupped helix, a Yagi or crossed Yagi antenna element, a log-periodic antenna element, or a stacked patch antenna element.

    [0025] In an implementation illustrated in Figure 4, the radiating feed element is configured as a cupped helix (helical) antenna. A helical antenna is an electromagnetic radiator made of a conducting wire wound in the form of a screw thread forming a helix. The pattern of a single turn determines polarization along the axis while the array determines the pattern shape. A circular cup around the feed point reduces the excitation of unwanted modes. In some implementations, the helix may be connected, at a feed point, to a center conductor of a coaxial transmission line. An outer conductor of the coaxial transmission line may be attached to a ground plane. The ground plane may take different forms. For example, in some implementations, the ground plane may be flat. In other implementations, the ground plane may be cupped in the form of a cylindrical cavity or in the form of a frustum cavity. Alternatively, or in addition to coaxial transmission lines, other types of feeds (such as waveguides and dielectric rods) are within the contemplation of the present disclosure.

    [0026] In the end-fire, or axial, mode of operation, the helical radiating element has a single major lobe, the major lobe exhibiting a maximum radiation intensity along the axis of the helix. Minor lobes may be disposed at oblique angles to the axis.

    [0027] In some implementations, the radiating feed element can be a Yagi (Yagi-Uda) or crossed Yagi antenna element that includes a number of linear dipole elements, one of which is energized directly by a feed transmission line, others of which act as parasitic radiators having currents induced by mutual coupling.

    [0028] In some implementations, the radiating feed element may be a log-periodic antenna element. While similar to the Yagi-Uda array, in which only one element is directly energized by the feed line and the others operate in a parasitic mode, all the elements of the log-periodic array are coupled with a feed. In a log-periodic antenna, the antenna is fed at the small end of the structure. This produces an end-fire beam in the direction of the longer elements.

    [0029] In some implementations, the radiating feed element may be a stacked microstrip patch antenna element. Microstrip antennas may include a very thin metallic strip (patch) placed a small fraction of a wavelength above a ground plane. The microstrip patch is designed so its pattern maximum is normal to the patch. This may be accomplished by appropriately choosing the mode (field configuration) of excitation beneath the patch. End-fire radiation can be accomplished by mode selection.

    [0030] As indicated above, in some implementations, each radiating element is coupled with a respective amplifier module disposed proximate to the radiating element. Thus, the active phased array contemplated by the present disclosure includes a large number of small solid state amplifiers (SSPAs), one per feed element-polarization, which may be optimally located very near to the radiating elements in order to minimize line losses.

    [0031] The power amplifier arrangements may be produced by SMT (surface mount technology) component placement systems, or pick-and-place machines, which are robotic machines used to place surface-mount devices (SMDs) onto a printed circuit board (PCB).

    [0032] In an implementation, each radiating feed element may be associated with at least one gallium nitride (GaN) SSPA. GaN SSPAs represent an alternative technology to TWTAs in high throughput satellite architectures.

    [0033] An active phased array including GaN SSPAs may be configured to produce hundreds of overlapping downlink user beams while obviating a need for travelling wave tube amplifiers, R-switches, output multiplexer filters and waveguide that might otherwise be required.

    [0034] Each feed element may be communicatively coupled with a separate power amplifier for each respective polarization at which the feed element is intended to operate. As indicated above, the power amplifiers may, advantageously, be located very near to the feed elements in order to minimize line losses. As a result, output waveguides, that would be required in the absence of the present teachings, may be omitted from the forward path. As a result, the number of components, mass and complexity of a phased array are all reduced.

    [0035] Advantageously, each power amplifier is fed by coaxial cable (rather than a waveguide) and configured such that, for example, an end-fire helical radiating antenna feed element plugs directly into the power amplifier.

    [0036] In an implementation, one or more of the power amplifiers may be configured in a variant of the known Doherty configuration. A Doherty amplifier may provide high efficiency over an output backoff power range associated with the linearity profile required for bandwidth efficient modulation and coding waveforms. A Doherty amplifier may include relatively linear amplifiers, which are known to have lower efficiency at lower power levels. As a result, in modulation schemes that have high peak to average power ratio, a high efficiency is still obtained at back-off points. A Doherty amplifier may use one main power amplifier (PA) and one auxiliary PA. At maximum output power, both PAs contribute equally to the output. When decreasing the input drive level to, for example, half the maximum combined output power, the auxiliary PA may be configured to shut down.

    [0037] In an implementation, each radiating element illuminates a single large reflector to produce a very small beamlet in the reflector far-field. In the far-field, E- and H-field components are orthogonal to each other. The size of the beamlet is a function of the wavelength of the signal and the reflector diameter. For the nineteen element array illustrated in Figure 4, nineteen beamlets may be combined to form a single beam. Figure 5 illustrates an example of interleaving of a number of such beams, each beam having nineteen radiating elements.

    [0038] In an example implementation, a 9 meter diameter reflector is contemplated that will produce a beamlet of about 0.1 degree in the 20 GHz band. Adjacent radiating elements will produce adjacent beamlets in the far-field at a spacing determined by the element spacing and the focal length of the reflector. In the example implementation, the beamlet spacing will be about 0.07 degrees. Because the beamlet spacing is less than the beamlet width, clusters of overlapping beamlets will efficiently combine in the far-field to produce an antenna pattern which is an image of the feed element cluster. Accordingly, the phased array may be referred to as an "imaging array" of which the beamlets may be regarded as pixels that produce the image.

    [0039] For a given diameter of a reflector of an MBA system, a beam diameter and spacing may be determined for any particular desired operating frequency and antenna efficiency. An oversized reflector with respect to the chosen beam size may be used to increase antenna efficiency and beam isolation. Spacing between radiating feed elements in the radiating feed element array may be determined by the maximum size of the radiating feed element for efficient beam forming and the size of the electronics package that is able to fit behind the radiating feed elements.

    [0040] The presently disclosed techniques improve multi beam antenna efficiency by as much as 70% compared to conventional multi beam antennas. Because radiating feed elements are not shared between beams, beamforming circuitry is simplified to a small circuit card per beam. In some implementations, single carrier per beam operation is contemplated, which relaxes backoff requirements due to lower linearity requirements relative to multicarrier operation, and thus allows all amplifiers for a beam to be operated at maximum efficiency. In some implementations, multiple amplifiers per beam enable soft redundancy and eliminate a requirement for sparing and associated costs.

    [0041] Improved antenna performance combined with low output losses has been found to reduce DC power to less than 50% of that required by conventional repeater output sections.

    [0042] Multiple amplifiers per beam enables soft redundancy and eliminates a requirement for sparing and associated costs. In some implementations, there is sufficient beamlet overlap to enable soft redundancy for radiating feed element amplifiers. As used herein and in the claims, the term "soft redundancy" means that in the event that one of the amplifiers used to form the antenna beam fails, the beam shape may be reformed by re-optimizing the amplitude and phase coefficients to the remaining amplifiers. Soft redundancy may obviate a need to provide spare amplifiers.

    [0043] Figure 6 illustrates an example implementation of soft redundancy. The beam forming network (BFN) 640, in the illustrated implementation, is configured to perform seven element beam forming. The BFN 640 includes 1:7 power splitter 642, and commandable variable amplitude and phase (VAP) adjusting arrangements 644. In some implementations, one or more of the VAP adjusting arrangements 644 may be implemented as a monolithic microwave integrated circuit (MMIC) chip. Each of the seven VAP adjusting arrangements 644 is communicatively coupled with a single power amplifier 650, which is communicatively coupled with a single corresponding feed element 660. In an instance of a failure of amplifier 650A, for example, the beam shape may be reformed by re-optimizing the amplitude and phase coefficients for remaining VAP adjusting arrangements 644B corresponding to the remaining amplifiers 650B.

    [0044] A still further advantage of the present teachings is that the gain-area product (GAP) of the MBA may be substantially improved with respect to conventional techniques, as will be demonstrated by reference to Figures 7-10.

    [0045] The example illustrated in Fig. 7 is not according to the invention and is present for illustration purposes only. Figure 7 illustrates a contour plot of MBA directivity with respect to peak directivity in accordance with an implementation. The illustrated plot depicts performance of a seven element spot beam and a 5 m diameter reflector. It may be observed that, in the illustrated example, a beam width in the far-field, represented by two opposing edges of the hexagonal polygon 701, is about 0.2°. The gain-area product for the illustrated implementation has been found to be about 14,500, corresponding to approximately 35% efficiency. The rolloff at the edge of the hexagonal polygon 701 is about 4-4.5db. The 6 dB rolloff contour is approximately circular, denoting the effects of diffraction limits.

    [0046] Figure 8 illustrates a contour plot of MBA directivity with respect to peak directivity in accordance with another implementation. The illustrated plot depicts performance of a nineteen element spot beam and a reflector of about 9 meter diameter. It may be observed that the beam width in the far-field, represented by two opposing edges of the hexagonal polygon 801, is about 0.35°. The average directivity in the hexagonal polygon 801 is about 54 dB. The gain-area product for the illustrated implementation has been found to be over 25,000, corresponding to better than 61% efficiency. The rolloff at the edge of the hexagonal polygon 801 is about 1-2 db. In contrast to the contour plot for a seven element spot beam illustrated in Figure 6, the 6 dB rolloff contour is approximately hexagonal, denoting more precise beam forming. It may be observed that, because of the above-mentioned steep roll-off, nearly adjacent coverage areas (not illustrated) may each be configured at an identical combination of frequency sub-band and polarization, with negligible mutual interference. Advantageously, the frequency reuse scheme may be employed while avoiding use of a signal encoding scheme.

    [0047] Figure 9 illustrates a contour plot of MBA directivity with respect to peak directivity in accordance with a yet further implementation. The illustrated plot depicts performance of a 37 element spot beam and a reflector of about 9 meter diameter. It may be observed that the beam width in the far-field, represented by two opposing vertices of the hexagonal polygon 901, is about 0.48°. The average directivity in the hexagonal polygon 901 is 51 dBi. The gain-area product is about 24,000, corresponding to better than 58% efficiency. The rolloff at the edge of the hexagonal polygon 901 is about 4 db. Again, in contrast to the contour plot for the seven element spot beam illustrated in Figure 6, the 6 dB rolloff contour is approximately hexagonal.

    [0048] The example illustrated in Fig. 10 is not according to the invention and is present for illustration purposes only. Referring to FIG. 10 a contour plot of MBA directivity with respect to boresight peak directivity for a 37 helix element spot beam coverage area is illustrated. The contour plot assumes a reflector of about 3 meter diameter. The beam spacing in the far-field represented by two opposing edges of the hexagonal polygon 1001 is about 0.9°. The rolloff at the edge of the hexagonal polygon 1001 is about 4 db. Again, in contrast to the 7 element configuration in FIG. 6, the 6 dB rolloff contour is approximately hexagonal. An MBA system configured to form approximately 300 such beams can provide, full earth coverage.

    [0049] Thus, an imaging array fed reflector for a high throughput satellite payload has been described.

    [0050] The foregoing merely illustrates principles of the invention. It will thus be appreciated that those skilled in the art will be able to devise numerous systems and methods which, although not explicitly shown or described herein, embody said principles of the invention and are thus within the scope of the following claims.


    Claims

    1. A multi-beam antenna system for a spacecraft, the multi-beam antenna system comprising:

    a reflector; and

    a plurality of radiating feed elements (165), configured as a phased array, illuminating the reflector, configured to operate at a frequency having a characteristic wavelength (A), the feed elements being configured to produce, in a far field at the reflector, a set of contiguous abutting beams;

    wherein each radiating feed element (165) is coupled with and disposed proximate to a respective amplifier module (150), wherein each radiating feed element is configured to form a respective beamlet; and

    wherein each radiating feed element (165), together with its respective amplifier module (150), is disposed in a closely packed triangular lattice

    , wherein each respective beamlet has a beamlet width in the far field, the beamlet width being a function of the characteristic wavelength and a diameter of the reflector;

    and wherein the multi-beam antenna system is configured such that the beamlets have a beamlet spacing in the far field; characterized

    in that the beamlet width is approximately 0.1 degree in a 20GHz band, and the beamlet spacing is less than the beamlet width; and wherein the separation between adjacent radiating feed elements is not greater than 2λ.


     
    2. The multi-beam antenna system of claim 1, wherein each of the radiating feed elements is associated with only one of the contiguous abutting beams.
     
    3. The multi-beam antenna system of claim 1 or 2, wherein each beam is formed from a plurality of associated beamlets and each radiating feed element is associated with a single one of the plurality of associated beamlets.
     
    4. The multi-beam antenna system of any preceding claim, wherein each amplifier module includes a first amplifier and a second amplifier, each amplifier corresponding to orthogonal polarizations.
     
    5. The multi-beam antenna system of claim 1, wherein the beamlet spacing is approximately 0.07 degrees.
     
    6. The multi-beam antenna system of any preceding claim, wherein, for each beam in the set of contiguous abutting beams, a single carrier is operated.
     
    7. The multi-beam antenna system of any preceding claim, wherein, for each beam in the set of contiguous abutting beams, a set of amplifiers (650A, 650B) is configured to provide soft redundancy.
     
    8. The multi-beam antenna system of any preceding claim, wherein each radiating feed element includes an end-fired element, the end-fired element being configured as a helical, Yagi, crossed Yagi, log periodic, or a stacked patch antenna element.
     
    9. The multi-beam antenna system of any preceding claim, wherein each amplifier module includes at least one main amplifier and at least one auxiliary amplifier, the at least one main amplifier and at least one auxiliary amplifier being arranged in a Doherty configuration.
     
    10. A spacecraft comprising a communications payload subsystem, the payload subsystem including a multi-beam antenna system in accordance with claim 1.
     
    11. The spacecraft of claim 10, wherein each of the radiating feed elements is associated with only one of the contiguous abutting beams.
     
    12. The spacecraft of claim 10 or 11, wherein each beam is formed from a plurality of associated beamlets
     


    Ansprüche

    1. Mehrstrahlantennensystem für ein Raumfahrzeug, wobei das Mehrstrahlantennensystem Folgendes umfasst:

    einen Reflektor; und

    mehrere abstrahlende Speiseelemente (165), die als ein phasengesteuertes Array konfiguriert sind und den Reflektor beleuchten, die konfiguriert sind, um bei einer Frequenz in Betrieb zu sein, die eine charakteristische Wellenlänge (λ) aufweist, wobei die Speiseelemente konfiguriert sind, um in einem Fernfeld an dem Reflektor einen Satz zusammenhängender angrenzender Strahlen zu erzeugen;

    wobei jedes abstrahlende Speiseelement (165) mit einem jeweiligen Verstärkermodul (150) gekoppelt ist und nahe diesem angeordnet ist, wobei jedes abstrahlende Speiseelement konfiguriert ist, um ein jeweiliges Beamlet auszubilden; und

    wobei jedes abstrahlende Speiseelement (165) zusammen mit seinem jeweiligen Verstärkermodul (150) in einem dicht gepackten dreieckigen Gitter angeordnet ist,

    wobei jedes jeweilige Beamlet eine Beamlet-Breite in dem Fernfeld aufweist, wobei die Beamlet-Breite eine Funktion der charakteristischen Wellenlänge und eines Durchmessers des Reflektors ist;

    und wobei das Mehrstrahlantennensystem derart konfiguriert ist, dass die Beamlets einen Beamlet-Abstand in dem Fernfeld aufweisen;

    dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass die Beamlet-Breite in einem 20 GHz-Band ungefähr 0,1 Grad beträgt und der Beamlet-Abstand kleiner als die Beamlet-Breite ist; und wobei die Trennung zwischen benachbarten abstrahlenden Speiseelementen nicht größer als 2 λ ist.


     
    2. Mehrstrahlantennensystem nach Anspruch 1, wobei jedes der abstrahlenden Speiseelemente nur einem der zusammenhängenden angrenzenden Strahlen zugeordnet ist.
     
    3. Mehrstrahlantennensystem nach Anspruch 1 oder 2, wobei jeder Strahl aus mehreren zugeordneten Beamlets ausgebildet wird und jedes abstrahlende Speiseelement einem einzelnen der mehreren zugeordneten Beamlets zugeordnet ist.
     
    4. Mehrstrahlantennensystem nach einem der vorhergehenden Ansprüche, wobei jedes Verstärkermodul einen ersten Verstärker und einen zweiten Verstärker beinhaltet, wobei jeder Verstärker orthogonalen Polarisationen entspricht.
     
    5. Mehrstrahlantennensystem nach Anspruch 1, wobei der Beamlet-Abstand ungefähr 0,07 Grad beträgt.
     
    6. Mehrstrahlantennensystem nach einem der vorhergehenden Ansprüche, wobei für jeden Strahl in dem Satz zusammenhängender angrenzender Strahlen ein einzelner Träger betrieben wird.
     
    7. Mehrstrahlantennensystem nach einem der vorhergehenden Ansprüche, wobei für jeden Strahl in dem Satz zusammenhängender angrenzender Strahlen ein Satz von Verstärkern (650A, 650B) konfiguriert ist, um eine weiche Redundanz bereitzustellen.
     
    8. Mehrstrahlantennensystem nach einem der vorhergehenden Ansprüche, wobei jedes abstrahlende Speiseelement ein endgebranntes Element beinhaltet, wobei das endgebrannte Element als ein sprialförmiges, Yagi, Kreuzyagi, logarithmisch periodisches oder ein gestapeltes Patch-Antennenelement konfiguriert ist.
     
    9. Mehrstrahlantennensystem nach einem der vorhergehenden Ansprüche, wobei jedes Verstärkermodul wenigstens einen Hauptverstärker und wenigstens einen Hilfsverstärker beinhaltet, wobei der wenigstens eine Hauptverstärker und der wenigstens eine Hilfsverstärker in einer Doherty-Konfiguration eingerichtet sind.
     
    10. Raumfahrzeug, das ein Kommunikationsnutzlastteilsystem umfasst, wobei das Nutzlastteilsystem ein Mehrstrahlantennensystem nach Anspruch 1 beinhaltet.
     
    11. Raumfahrzeug nach Anspruch 10, wobei jedes der abstrahlenden Speiseelemente nur einem der zusammenhängenden angrenzenden Strahlen zugeordnet ist.
     
    12. Raumfahrzeug nach Anspruch 10 oder 11, wobei jeder Strahl aus mehreren zugeordneten Beamlets ausgebildet wird.
     


    Revendications

    1. Système d'antenne multifaisceau destiné à un engin spatial, le système d'antennes multifaisceau comprenant :

    un réflecteur ; et

    une pluralité d'éléments d'alimentation rayonnants (165), configurés en réseau à commande de phase, éclairant le réflecteur, configuré pour fonctionner à une fréquence ayant une longueur d'onde caractéristique (λ), les éléments d'alimentation étant configurés pour produire, dans un champ lointain au niveau du réflecteur, un ensemble de faisceaux contigus adjacents ;

    dans lequel chaque élément d'alimentation rayonnant (165) est couplé avec et disposé à proximité d'un module amplificateur respectif (150), dans lequel chaque élément d'alimentation rayonnant est configuré pour former un petit faisceau respectif ; et

    dans lequel chaque élément d'alimentation rayonnant (165), conjointement avec son module amplificateur respectif (150), est disposé en un réseau triangulaire compact,

    dans lequel chaque petit faisceau respectif a une largeur de faisceau dans le champ lointain, la largeur de faisceau étant une fonction de la longueur d'onde caractéristique et d'un diamètre du réflecteur ;

    et dans lequel le système d'antenne multifaisceau est configuré de telle sorte que les petits faisceaux ont un espacement de faisceaux dans le champ lointain ; caractérisé en ce que la largeur du faisceau est d'environ 0,1 degré dans une bande de 20 GHz, et en ce que l'espacement des faisceaux est inférieur à la largeur du faisceau ; et dans lequel la séparation entre les éléments d'alimentation rayonnants adjacents n'est pas supérieure à 2λ.


     
    2. Système d'antenne multifaisceau selon la revendication 1, dans lequel chacun des éléments d'alimentation rayonnants est associé à un seul des faisceaux contigus adjacents.
     
    3. Système d'antenne multifaisceau selon la revendication 1 ou 2, dans lequel chaque faisceau est formé d'une pluralité de petits faisceaux associés et chaque élément d'alimentation rayonnant est associé à un seul de la pluralité de petits faisceaux associés.
     
    4. Système d'antenne multifaisceau selon l'une quelconque des revendications précédentes, dans lequel chaque module amplificateur comporte un premier amplificateur et un second amplificateur, chaque amplificateur correspondant à des polarisations orthogonales.
     
    5. Système d'antenne multifaisceau selon la revendication 1, dans lequel l'espacement des petits faisceaux est d'environ 0,07 degrés.
     
    6. Système d'antenne à faisceaux multiples selon l'une quelconque des revendications précédentes, dans lequel, pour chaque faisceau de l'ensemble de faisceaux contigus adjacents, une seule porteuse est actionnée.
     
    7. Système d'antenne multifaisceau selon l'une quelconque des revendications précédentes, dans lequel, pour chaque faisceau de l'ensemble de faisceaux contigus adjacents, un ensemble d'amplificateurs (650A, 650B) est configuré pour fournir une redondance souple.
     
    8. Système d'antenne multifaisceau selon l'une quelconque des revendications précédentes, dans lequel chaque élément d'alimentation rayonnant comporte un élément à rayonnement longitudinal, l'élément à rayonnement longitudinal étant configuré sous la forme d'un élément d'antenne hélicoïdal, de Yagi, de Yagi croisée, de log-périodique ou empilé.
     
    9. Système d'antenne multifaisceau selon l'une quelconque des revendications précédentes, dans lequel chaque module amplificateur comporte au moins un amplificateur principal et au moins un amplificateur auxiliaire, l'au moins un amplificateur principal et l'au moins un amplificateur auxiliaire étant agencés dans une configuration Doherty.
     
    10. Engin spatial comprenant un sous-système de charge utile de communications, le sous-système de charge utile comportant un système d'antenne multifaisceau selon la revendication 1.
     
    11. Engin spatial selon la revendication 10, dans lequel chacun des éléments d'alimentation rayonnants est associé à un seul des faisceaux contigus adjacents.
     
    12. Engin spatial selon la revendication 10 ou 11, dans lequel chaque faisceau est formé d'une pluralité de petits faisceaux associés.
     




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    Cited references

    REFERENCES CITED IN THE DESCRIPTION



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    Patent documents cited in the description




    Non-patent literature cited in the description