Low gain and steerable vehicle antennas for communications with land mobile satellite
Abstract
Current development activities at JPL for ground mobile vehicle antennas to be used with the Land Mobile Satellite Service (LMSS) system are described. Both low gain and electronically steerable high gain type antennas are discussed in terms of their design concept and RF performance. For the low gain type, three classes of antennas are under various stages of development. These are the crossed-drooping dipole, quadrifilar helix, and microstrip patch designs. The antennas are intended to provide circularly-polarized radiation with a minimum of 3-dB gain in the angular region from 19 degrees to 60 deg from the horizon in elevation plane and with an omnidirectional pattern in azimuthal plane. For the electronically steerable high gain type, circularly-polarized microstrip patch phased arrays formed on a planar surface and on the surface of a truncated cone are under study. The arrays are intended to provide a minimum of 12 dB gain in the same angular region in elevation plane at all azimuthal angles. This coverage is accomplished by scanning the high gain pencil beam in both elevation and azimuthal directions. Both types of antennas are to transmit at 821-831 MHz band and to receive at 866-876 MHz band. They must be of low cost design and reasonably conformal to the vehicle.
- Publication:
-
NTC 1982; National Telesystems Conference
- Pub Date:
- 1982
- Bibcode:
- 1982ntc..conf....1W
- Keywords:
-
- Antenna Design;
- Land Mobile Satellite Service;
- Microwave Antennas;
- Power Gain;
- Satellite Antennas;
- Steerable Antennas;
- Antenna Arrays;
- Antenna Radiation Patterns;
- Circular Polarization;
- Microstrip Devices;
- Omnidirectional Antennas;
- Pencil Beams;
- Communications and Radar