Publication Date:
2018-06-05
Description:
Large axially-symmetric ground-based dual-reflector antennas are used in a variety of applications simultaneously requiring very high gain and very low noise (e.g., satellite communications, radio astronomy, deep-space communications, and radar). In these systems, reducing the noise by 10 % is equivalent to increasing the antenna gain by roughly 0.5 dB. Since the early days of radio-astronomy this fact has continuously driven efforts to reduce the noise of front-end low-noise amplifiers--a major noise contributor. As the performance of the front-end amplifiers improved, the relative importance of the noise generated by the surrounding warm ground increased, causing the antenna noise to become a major factor in the overall system sensitivity. Since large ground-based reflectors have been around for several decades, the various electrical and mechanical parameters affecting their performance have received considerable attention and are generally well understood. However, the impact of the subreflector supporting struts on the antenna noise performance remains a source of uncertainty. The reason for this stems from the usually large electrical dimensions involved, which precludes the accurate modeling of the various strut-scattering mechanisms. For the particular antennas used on NASA's Deep Space Network, which have been designed to minimize all noise sources, several studies have typically reported measured noise temperatures between 2 and 3 K (at approx. 8.45 GHz, antenna pointing at zenith), attributed to the struts and other unknown effects (see for example [1] and [2]). With this in mind, an effort has recently been conducted to determine optimal strut shapes to reduce the associated noise contribution [3].
Keywords:
Electronics and Electrical Engineering
Type:
IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society International Symposium 1997. Volume 3: Digest; 1659-1662; IEEE-Catalog-97CH36122-Vol-3
Format:
text
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