[0001] The invention relates to a radio-frequency resonator, and more specifically to a
stepped-impedance coaxial radio-frequency resonator. The invention also relates to
a radio-frequency filter comprising a plurality of coupled resonators.
[0002] The expression radio-frequency designates frequency comprised between 3 kHz and 300
GHz. The invention applies more specifically to frequencies belonging to the UHF (Ultra-High-Frequency)
band, i.e. comprised between 300 MHz and 3 GHz, although it can also apply to frequencies
belonging to the VHF (Very-High-Frequency) band, i.e. comprised between 30 MHz and
300 MHz, and/or to the SHF (Super-High-Frequency) band, i.e. comprised between 3 GHz
and 30 GHz, and/or millimetric band, i.e. comprised between 30 GHz and 300 GHz.
[0003] In the fields of electronics and telecommunications there is an ever-increasing need
for radio-frequency resonators and filters having a small size, good electric performances
(low insertion losses, flat amplitude and linear phase in the pass-band, high rejection
outside the pass-band, tunability, etc.) and low cost. Size and mass are particularly
critical parameters in comparatively low-frequency applications, i.e. in the VHF and
UHF bands. Moreover, size and mass reduction usually comes at the expense of increased
insertion losses and decreased quality factor. Figure 1 shows qualitatively the size
- insertion losses tradeoff for the main available technologies in the UHF Band.
[0004] Lumped element resonator and filters, which can be used up to the C-band (4 - 8 GHz)
are the most compact ones, but are plagued by high insertion losses and have very
reduced quality factors (Q= 10 - 50). At the other end of the spectrum, waveguide
(or "volume") resonator and filters have very high quality factors (up to 10.000 or
more) and low insertion losses, but they are very bulky. Microstrip, coaxial and dielectric
resonators offer intermediate performances. Within the coaxial technology, in particular,
one can distinguish between uniform air coaxial resonators, with better electrical
properties, and uniform dielectric coaxial resonators, more compact but with lower
Q and higher insertion losses. Coaxial stepped impedance resonators, constituted by
a plurality of coaxial line sections of different characteristic impedance connected
in cascade, offer an interesting tradeoff between conflicting electrical and mechanical
requirements. The coaxial line sections can be partially or wholly loaded with high-dielectric-constant
ceramics for further miniaturization, but again at the expenses of increased losses
and reduced Q. Coaxial stepped impedance resonators are described, in particular,
by the following papers:
- M. Makimoto and S. Yamashita "Compact Bandpass Filters Using Stepped Impedance Resonator"
Proceedings of the IEEE, Vol. 67, No. 1, January 1979;
- S. Yamashita and M. Makimoto "The Q-Factor of Coaxial Resonators Partially Loaded
with High Dielectric Constant Microwave Ceramics" , IEEE Transactions on Microwave
Theory and Techniques, Vol. MTT-31, No. 6, June 1983; and
- S. Yamashita and M. Makimoto "Miniaturized Coaxial Resonator Partially Loaded with
High-Dielectric-Constant Microwave Ceramics", IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory
and Techniques, Vol. MTT-31, No. 9, September 1983;
and by
US Patent 4,059,815.
[0005] Document
US 4,292,610 describes a stepped-impedance coaxial resonator having a particularly compact structure.
As illustrated on figure 2, such a resonator comprises an outer, hollow conductor
1, an inner conductor 2 coaxially mounted within the outer conductor and having a
first end short-circuited to a wall of the outer conductor and a second end spaced
from the wall of the outer conductor, and an intermediate hollow conductor 3 coaxially
mounted between said inner conductor and said outer conductor. Intermediate conductor
3 has a closed end short-circuited to the second end of the inner conductor, and an
open end. Conductors 1, 2 and 3 form three coaxial line sections I, II and III having
different geometries and therefore, in general, different characteristic impedances
Z
1, Z
2 and Z
3. Interestingly, sections II and III are nested with each other. A drawback of this
resonator is its lack of design flexibility, as the electrical lengths and the characteristic
impedances of the different coaxial line sections are not independent from each other.
Moreover, the number of cascaded different coaxial line sections cannot be changed,
and the resonator is not easily made tunable.
[0006] The invention aims at curing, at least in part, some or all the above-mentioned drawbacks
of the prior art, and more particularly at providing a new resonator structure achieving
a better tradeoff between the conflicting requirements of reduced size and good electrical
performances.
[0007] An object of the present invention, allowing achieving this aim, is a radio-frequency
resonator comprising a plurality of coaxial line sections connected in cascade, each
of said coaxial line sections comprising an inner conductor surrounded by an outer
conductor of tubular shape, wherein said coaxial line sections are nested within each
other, the outer conductor of each said coaxial line section, except an outermost
one, serving as the inner conductor of another one of said coaxial line sections,
the resonator being characterized in that each conductor of each coaxial line section,
except the outer conductor of the outermost coaxial line section, has an open-circuit
end and an opposite end which is short-circuited to said outer conductor of said outermost
coaxial line section, and in that said conductors of said coaxial line sections -
except the outer conductor of said outermost coaxial line section - are arranged head-to-tail,
their open-circuit and short-circuited ends being alternatively situated on opposite
sides of the resonator.
[0008] According to different embodiments of the invention:
- The radio-frequency resonator may comprise a conductive shell of generally cylindrical
shape having a lateral surface, a first base surface and a second base surface, said
lateral surface constituting the outer conductor of the outermost coaxial line; a
conductor of tubular or rod-like shape, called central conductor, constituting the
inner conductor of an innermost coaxial line, said central conductor being contained
within said conductive shell and having a first end short-circuited to said first
base surface a second end facing said second base surface; and at least one tubular
conductor, contained within said conductive shell and containing said central conductor,
having an end contacting one said base surface and an opposite end facing the other
base surface.
- The radio-frequency resonator may comprise exactly two said coaxial line sections.
- The radio-frequency resonator may comprise exactly three said coaxial line sections.
- An inner conductor of an innermost coaxial line section may be mounted slidably along
its longitudinal axis, in such a way that it can be partially extracted from the resonator.
- An inner conductor of a coaxial line section may be electrically connected to a variable
capacitor.
- The outer conductor of the outermost coaxial line section may have a rectangular (including
square as a particular case) cross-section.
- The radio-frequency resonator may further comprise an excitation rod extending transversally
with respect to said coaxial line sections, said excitation rod having a distal end
extending to the outside of the resonator and a proximal end contacting or facing
a conductor other than said outer conductor of the outermost coaxial line section
[0009] Another object of the invention is a radio-frequency filter comprising a plurality
of such radio-frequency resonators mounted adjacent to each other and coupled by openings
in the outer conductors of their respective outermost coaxial lines, forming coupling
irises. In particular, said radio-frequency resonators may be identical to each other.
[0010] It is important to note that the expression "coaxial line" should be interpreted
broadly, as indicating any transmission line section comprising an elongated conductor
("core") surrounded - without direct contact - by a tubular conductor ("shielding"),
both conductor having constant cross-sections (i.e. being "cylindrical" in the general
sense of the term, not limited to circular-base cylinders) and parallel longitudinal
axis. This definition includes e.g. "eccentric coaxial lines", which are not exactly
"coaxial" in geometrical terms.
[0011] Additional features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent
from the subsequent description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings,
wherein:
- Figure 3 is a simplified representation of the structure of a resonator according
to an embodiment of the invention, comprising an arbitrary number N of cascaded coaxial
sections;
- Figure 4, is an electrical scheme of the resonator of figures 3 ;
- Figure 5 is a simplified representation of the structure of a resonator according
to an embodiment of the invention, comprising exactly two cascaded coaxial sections;
- Figures 6A - 6D are plots showing how different parameters characterizing the resonator
of figure 5 depend on the characteristic impedance ration of its two cascaded coaxial
sections;
- Figure 7 is a simplified representation of the structure of a resonator according
to an embodiment of the invention, comprising exactly three cascaded coaxial sections;
- Figure 8 allows comparing the size and the unloaded quality factor Q, of the resonators
of figures 5 and 7, of an air uniform coaxial resonator and of a dielectric uniform
coaxial resonator (εr = 90);
- Figure 9 is the electrical scheme of a second-order Chebyshev band-pass filter according
to an embodiment of the invention;
- Figure 10 is an elevation view of a practical implementation of the filter of figure
9;
- Figures 11A and 11B are plots of the measured and simulated values of the scattering
parameters S11 and S12 of the filter of figure 10;
- Figure 12 is the electrical scheme of a sixth-order Chebyshev band-pass filter according
to an embodiment of the invention;
- Figures 13A and 13B are plots of the simulated values of the scattering parameters
S11 and S12 of the filter of figure 12;
- Figures 14A and 14B illustrates two tunable resonators according to alternative embodiments
of the invention; and
- Figure 15 shows plots of the measured and simulated values of the scattering parameters
S11 and S12 of a second-order tunable filter according to an embodiment of the invention.
[0012] The physical structure of a quarter-wave radio-frequency resonator according to the
invention is represented on figure 3. In such a resonator, n>1 coaxial line sections
are nested within each other (""matryoshka" structure), disposed head-to-tail - i.e.
with open-circuit and short-circuit ends on alternate sides of the resonator. From
another point of view, the resonator comprises (n+1) cylindrical conductors C
1 - C
n+1 whose cross-sections have diameters indicated by d
i, with i=1 to (n+1). The innermost or central conductor C
1 can be either tubular (i.e. hollow) or rod-like (i.e. solid); the outermost conductor
C
n+1 has a lateral surface and two opposite base surfaces, forming a conductive shell.
All the conductors, except the outermost one, have an open-circuit end and an opposite
end which is short-circuited to the outermost conductor C
n+1. Conductors are arranged head-to-toe in the sense that their open-circuit and short-circuited
ends are alternatively situated on opposite sides of the resonator (on figure 3, odd-numbered
conductors have their left end short-circuited to the left base surface of the outermost
conductor, while even-numbered conductors have their right end short-circuited to
the right base surface of the outermost conductor). It can be understood that conductors
C
1 and C
2 form a first coaxial line section having C
1 as the inner conductor (or "core") and C
2 as the outer conductor (or "shielding"); similarly, C
2 and C
3 form a second coaxial line section having C
2 as its core and C
3 as its shielding, and so on. Every conductor is then simultaneously the core of a
coaxial line section and the shielding of another coaxial line section - except the
central conductor, which is only a core, and the outermost conductor, which is only
a shielding.
[0013] The n coaxial line sections are connected in cascade, and the last coaxial line section
(implemented by the C
n and C
n+1 conductors) is shorted. Therefore, the structure of figure 3 can be represented by
the electric scheme of figure 4, wherein each coaxial line section CLS
1 - CLS
n is represented by a quadripole (two-port network) characterized by its characteristic
impedance Z
i and its electrical length θ
i with i=1 - n, and Z
SC is the impedance of the short-circuit termination. This representation neglects the
coupling sections, of physical length I
ε<<L (L being the physical length of the resonator) and characteristic impedance Z'
i. It should be noted that the discontinuities at the end of each tubular conductor
are very favorable to the coupling of TEM modes propagating along the coaxial line
sections.
[0014] In the present example it is assumed that all the coaxial line sections are concentric
and have circular cross-section but, as discussed above, this is not essential.
[0015] TEM modes can be excited inside the resonator by different means known in the art.
For example a rod (not represented here, but see CR
1, CR
2 on figure 10) can extend transversally to the axis of the coaxial line sections,
having a "distal" end connected to the outside of the resonator through an opening
in the lateral surface of the outermost conductor, and a "proximal" end contacting
- or being spaced from - another conductor. The distal end can be connected to the
core of a RF feeding coaxial cable, the shielding of which is connected to the outermost
conductor. Alternatively, TEM modes can be also excited e.g. by an iris, or by a "current
loop" obtained by forming a loop with the core of the RF feeding coaxial cable, whose
distal end contacts the outermost conductor.
[0016] Let L be the physical length of all the coaxial line sections, ε
ri its relative dielectric constant of the i-th section, d
i and D
i the diameters of the conductors forming its core and shielding, respectively (it
will be noted that the i-th conductor, with i>1, has an inner diameter equal to D
i-1 and an outer diameter equal to d
i; if the thickness of the conductor is negligible, D
i-1≅d
i; this approximation was used when discussing figure 3). Then, at frequency f, the
electrical length θ
l is given by:

where

is the propagation constant (λ
0=c/f being the wavelength in vacuum, c being the light speed in vacuum), and - assuming
losses negligible - the characteristic impedance Z
i is given by:

ε
0 and µ
0 being the electrical permittivity and the magnetic permeability of vacuum.
[0017] As it is well known in the art of electric networks, each two-port network can be
represented by an ABCD matrix, or chain matrix; the overall chain matrix of the resonator,
[ABCD] is obtained by orderly multiplying the individual chain matrices of the different
coaxial line sections, and

matrices representing the crossed connections between them:

[0018] The A, B, C and D elements of [ABCD] allow determining the impedance as seen in the
○○' plane of the open circuit end of the central conductor C
1:

This, in turn, allows determining the frequency at which the resonance condition Zr
i=∞ is satisfied.
[0019] Generalization of equations (1) to (5) to the case of coaxial sections having different
length
Ii is straightforward.
[0020] A detailed analysis of the electrical properties of the general structure of figure
3 is cumbersome; therefore, such an analysis will only be carried out for the case
of a two-section (i.e. three-conductor) resonator, illustrated on figure 5. This turns
out to be the preferred embodiment of the invention. It should be noted that, in the
structure of figure 5, the conductive shell formed by the outermost conductor C
3 need not be completely closed; in particular one or both of its base surfaces might
comprise openings.
[0021] It follows from equations 1 to 5 that, for n=2:

[0022] The resonance condition Zr
1=∞ is satisfied when:

[0023] By defining M as the characteristic impedance ratio M=Z
2/Z
1, equation (7) becomes:

[0024] If θ
1=θ
2=θ
0 (same-length sections, filled with a same dielectric e.g. air), then:

and the resonance frequency (more precisely: the fundamental resonance frequency)
F
0 is given by:

[0025] Figure 6A illustrates, the relationship between θ
0 and M expressed by equation (9).
[0026] The first spurious resonance is given by:

[0027] Figures 6B illustrates the relation between the ratio F
S1/F
0 and characteristic impedance contrast M.
[0028] Figures 6C and 6D have been obtained by considering the case of a particular implementation
wherein:
- central conductor C1 is a cylindrical rod with d1=7mm, made of brass;
- conductor C2 is a 1-mm thick aluminum cylinder whose internal diameter D2 is varied between 7.2 to about 34 mm;
- conductor C3 is also made of aluminum; it has a square cross section, with a 34 mm side (rectangular
geometry - of which a square cross-section is a particular case - is useful for implementing
filters, as it will be discussed later);
- the resonator is air-filled;
- the length of the coaxial sections formed by C2 and C3 is 30.6 mm and that of the coupling sections is 2mm; and
- the length of the coaxial sections formed by C1 and C2 is 28.6 mm.
[0029] On figure 6C, two curves illustrate, the relationship between the ratio F
S1/F
0 and M. One of said curves correspond to theoretical results, the other one to numerical
electromagnetic simulations. The difference between theoretical and simulation results
is small, and can be traced back to the coupling sections neglected by the analytical
theory. A third curve illustrates, the relationship between the ratio L/L
0 and M, where L
0 is the length of the inventive resonator and L that of an equivalent uniform quarter-wave
air coaxial resonator. When M increases, the resonant frequency decreases, and L increases
while L
0 remains constant; as a consequence (L/L
0) increases, as shown by the figure.
[0030] Figures 6D illustrates the unloaded quality factor Q as a function of M.
[0031] Inspection of figures 6A - 6D shows that:
- To minimize the electrical (and therefore physical) length, and to maximize the FS1/F0 ratio, it is necessary to choose a high characteristic impedance contrast M (Z2>>Z1), which can be achieved by reducing D1 (and therefore d2) while maintaining d1 and D3 constant; the intermediate conductor C2 is then only slightly larger than the central conductor C1 and much smaller than C3.
- To minimize the FS1/F0 ratio, it is necessary to choose a low characteristic impedance contrast M (Z1>>Z2), which can be achieved by increasing D1 (and therefore d2) while maintaining d1 and D2 constant; the intermediate conductor C2 is then much larger than the central conductor C1 and slightly smaller than C3
- Q is maximal for M=1 (Z2=Z1).
[0032] In the case M≅49 (corresponding to Z
1=1.7Ω, Z
2=82.9Ω, D
1-d
1=100 µm), F
0=220 MHz and F
S1=4.7 GHz, i.e. F
S1/F0≅21. A uniform quarter-wave, air-filled coaxial resonator having the same resonant
frequency F
0 would have a length of 341 mm. The invention allows then a length reduction of a
factor 11.14.
[0033] In the case M≅0.1 (corresponding to Z
1=87.3Ω, Z
2=8.2Ω), F
0=2 GHz and F
S1=2.9 GHz, i.e. F
S1/F
0=1.45. The length reduction with respect to an uniform quarter-wave coaxial resonator
is small; however, the availability of two close resonant frequencies can be useful
to implement dual-band filters.
[0034] Figure 7 is similar to figure 5, except in that it illustrates a three-section (and
then four-conductor) resonator, whose properties depend on two characteristic impedance
contrast factors, M1=Z
3/Z
2 and M2=Z
2/Z
1.
[0035] Figure 8 allows comparing at 435 MHz the lengths and unloaded quality factors of:
a two-section air-filled resonator according to an embodiment of the invention (cf.
figure 5), a three-section air-filled resonator according to another embodiment of
the invention (cf. figure 7), an uniform quarter-wave air-filled coaxial resonator
with characteristic impedance Z
c=77Ω corresponding to the optimal unloaded quality factor Q=3 100, and an uniform
quarter-wave dielectric coaxial resonator with ceramic relative permittivity Er=90
and loss tangent tg(δ)=10
-3. All the resonators have a square cross section with a side length of 34mm. Both
the two- and the three-section resonators have a substantially higher quality factor
than the uniform dielectric resonator, and only a slightly greater length. From a
different point of view, they are much shorter than the uniform air-filled resonator,
at the expense of a moderate reduction of the quality factor.
[0036] The application of the inventive filters to the realization of band-pass filters
will now be discussed. Extrapolation to the case of pass-band band-stop filters is
straightforward.
[0037] Figure 9 shows the electrical scheme of a second-order band-pass filter comprising
a parallel connection of two identical 2-section resonators R1 and R2 between admittance
inverters. K
01 and K
23 are the external coupling and K
12 the coupling between the resonators. The values of these parameters are determined
by a conventional Chebyshev synthesis.
[0038] Figure 10 illustrates a possible and non limitative, physical implementation of the
filter of figure 9. The outermost conductors C
31, C
32 of both resonators are constituted by a common aluminum casing AC, partitioned by
an internal wall SW which does not extend on the whole length of the resonators so
as to form, with the back wall of the casing, a coupling iris Cl. Two tuning screws
TS
1, TS
2 are provided to adjust the coupling strength, and therefore the coupling K
12. The intermediate conductors C
21, C
22 of both resonators are constituted by respective aluminum tubes fixed to the face
wall of the aluminum casing (not shown, to make the inner structure of the filter
visible) and not contacting the back wall; their central conductors C
11, C
12 are constituted by brass rods fixed to the back wall of the casing and not contacting
the face wall. Two excitations rods ER
1 and ER
2 extend transversally; their proximal ends contact the intermediate conductors C
21, C
22 while their distal ends exit the resonator through respective openings in the aluminum
casing. The distal ends of the excitation rods are connected - trough conventional
connectors - to the cores of two coaxial cables, whose shielding are connected to
the aluminum casing and to the ground thorough respective conducting chocks (visible
on the sides of the casing). The dimensions of the different elements are:
- diameters of the central conductors: d11=d12= 7mm;
- spacing between the central and the intermediate conductors: 500 µm;
- lengths of the intermediate conductors C21, C22: 30.6 mm and that of the coupling sections is 8 mm;
- thickness of the intermediate conductors C21, C22: 1 mm;
- lengths of the central conductors C11 C12: 32.8mm;
- inner dimensions of the aluminum casing: 34 mm ;
- outer dimensions of the aluminum casing with back and frontal walls: 86 mm x 50 mm
x 43 mm.
[0039] A smaller size (e.g. a reduction of the longitudinal dimension from 43 to 25 mm)
could be achieved using more sophisticated manufacturing techniques, such as electroforming.
[0040] The requirements of the 2
nd order filters are the following: central frequency F
0=435 MHz, relative pass bandwidth of 4.6% and 0.01 dB ripple within the pass band.
[0041] Figures 11A and 11 B show the frequency dependence of the scattering parameters S
11 and S
12, obtained from simulation and from measurement. Figure 11A is a narrow-band representation,
while figure 11B is a large-band one, showing the first spurious frequency F
S1, with F
S1=3.8GHz i.e. (F
S1/F
0)≅9.
[0042] The requirements of the 6
th order filter are the following: central frequency F
0=435 MHz, relative pass bandwidth of 6.8%, matching level better than 20 dB within
the pass band.
[0043] Figure 12 shows the electrical scheme of a 6
th order filter comprising six identical two-section resonators, with coupling constants
K
12, K
23, K
34, K
45, K
56 and K
67. The K
16 coupling is important as it allows introducing two transmission zeros near the pass
band.
[0044] Physically, the resonators can be arranged in a 3x2 matrix. Figures 13A and 13B are,
respectively, narrow-band and large-band representations of the frequency dependence
of scattering parameters S
11 and S
12. Figure 13A also shows (thick line and dotted line) the required filter specification.
[0045] Resonators according to the invention, and therefore filters built from them, can
be made tunable in several ways, two of which are illustrated on figures 14A and 14B.
[0046] In the embodiment of figure 14A, an electrical motor EM is used to move the central
conductor C
1 in an axial direction, thus changing the length of the portion of it which is contained
within the resonator. This changes the physical - and electrical - length of the first
coaxial line section, and therefore the resonance frequency. This allows broad, but
slow, tunability. Figure 14B shows an alternative embodiment, wherein a variable capacitor
(implemented e.g. by a varactor diode) is connected between the central conductor
C
1 (or an intermediate conductor, such as C
2) and the ground. This allow faster tuning, but in a narrower range, and reduces the
quality factor. It is clear that different tuning mechanisms (e.g. those of figures
14A and 14B) can be combined in a same device.
[0047] Figure 15 shows the frequency dependence of the scattering parameters S
11 and S
12 of a tunable filter, for 5 different values P1 - P5 of the central frequency, spanning
the 435 MHz - 1.63 GHz range.
1. A radio-frequency resonator comprising a plurality of coaxial line sections (CLS1 ...CLSn) connected in cascade, each of said coaxial line sections comprising an inner conductor
(Ci) surrounded by an outer conductor (Ci+1) of tubular shape, wherein said coaxial line sections are nested within each other,
the outer conductor of each said coaxial line section, except an outermost one (Cn+1), serving as the inner conductor of another one of said coaxial line sections, the
resonator being characterized in that each conductor of each coaxial line section, except the outer conductor of the outermost
coaxial line section, has an open-circuit end and an opposite end which is short-circuited
to said outer conductor of said outermost coaxial line section, and in that said conductors of said coaxial line sections - except the outer conductor of said
outermost coaxial line section - are arranged head-to-tail, their open-circuit and
short-circuited ends being alternatively situated on opposite sides of the resonator.
2. A radio-frequency resonator according to claim 1, comprising:
- a conductive shell (Cn+1) of generally cylindrical shape having a lateral surface, a first base surface and
a second base surface, said lateral surface constituting the outer conductor of the
outermost coaxial line;
- a conductor of tubular or rod-like shape, called central conductor (C1), constituting the inner conductor of an innermost coaxial line, said central conductor
being contained within said conductive shell and having a first end short-circuited
to said first base surface a second end facing said second base surface; and
- at least one tubular conductor (C2), contained within said conductive shell and containing said central conductor, having
an end contacting one said base surface and an opposite end facing the other base
surface.
3. A radio-frequency resonator according to any of the preceding claims, comprising exactly
two said coaxial line sections.
4. A radio-frequency resonator according to any of claims 1 or 2, comprising exactly
three said coaxial line sections.
5. A radio-frequency resonator according to any of the preceding claims, wherein an inner
conductor (C1) of an innermost coaxial line section is mounted slidably along its longitudinal
axis, in such a way that it can be partially extracted from the resonator.
6. A radio-frequency resonator according to any of the preceding claims, wherein an inner
conductor (Ci) of a coaxial line section is electrically connected to a variable capacitor (VC).
7. A radio-frequency resonator according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the
outer conductor of the outermost coaxial line section has a rectangular cross-section.
8. A radio-frequency resonator according to any of the preceding claims, further comprising
an excitation rod (ER1, ER2) extending transversally with respect to said coaxial line sections, said excitation
rod having a distal end extending to the outside of the resonator and a proximal end
contacting or facing a conductor other than said outer conductor of the outermost
coaxial line section
9. A radio-frequency filter comprising a plurality of radio-frequency resonators (R1,
R2) according to any of the preceding claims mounted adjacent to each other and coupled
by openings (CI) in the outer conductors of their respective outermost coaxial lines,
forming coupling irises.
10. A radio-frequency filter according to claim 9, wherein said radio-frequency resonators
(R1, R2) are identical to each other.