US2542185A - Rotatable attenuator without phase shift - Google Patents

Rotatable attenuator without phase shift Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2542185A
US2542185A US715510A US71551046A US2542185A US 2542185 A US2542185 A US 2542185A US 715510 A US715510 A US 715510A US 71551046 A US71551046 A US 71551046A US 2542185 A US2542185 A US 2542185A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
wave
phase shift
section
guide
polarization
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US715510A
Inventor
Fox Arthur Gardner
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
AT&T Corp
Original Assignee
Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc filed Critical Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority to US715510A priority Critical patent/US2542185A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2542185A publication Critical patent/US2542185A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01PWAVEGUIDES; RESONATORS, LINES, OR OTHER DEVICES OF THE WAVEGUIDE TYPE
    • H01P1/00Auxiliary devices
    • H01P1/22Attenuating devices
    • H01P1/222Waveguide attenuators

Definitions

  • This invention relates to variable attenuators for wave guides.
  • An object of the invention is to variably attenuate electromagnetic waves in a wave guide without concomitantly introducing a phase change in the output as the attenuation is adjusted.
  • Another object of the invention is to continu ously attenuate electromagnetic waves in a wave guide by means of a rotating guide section without introducing any change in output phase as the attenuation is adjusted.
  • Another object of the invention is to attenuate linearly polarized waves in accordance with a cosine function of the angle of rotation of its polarization, without introducing phase shifts.
  • Another object of the invention is to attenuate waves transmitted bilaterally through a wave guide without introducing shifts in phase or impedance mismatch.
  • a feature of the invention is a rotatable 180- degree differential phase shift section of wave guide connected between two stationary wave guide sections, each of the latter being provided with quadrature polarization suppressing devices.
  • Fig. 1 illustrates a rotatable attenuator in accordance with the invention
  • Fig. 2 is an explanatory electric force vector diagram
  • Fig. 3 is a modified rotatable attenuator
  • Fig. 4 is a section thereof taken along line 4-4.
  • Rotatable wave guide attenuators have heretofore been disclosed, for example, in the United States patent applications of A. E. Bowen, Serial No. 715,588, now Patent No. 2,531,194, issued November 21, 1950, and Serial No. 715,589, filed concurrently herewith.
  • Such attenuators are characterized by a capability of attenuating linearly polarized waves as a trigonometric function of 0, the angle of rotation, without concomitant change of polarization direction.
  • Variable Wave guide attenuators utilizing resistance films or the like, have been known to introduce undesired phase shifts along with the desired changes in attenuation.
  • wave guide attenuators which can be varied without changing the phase of the transmitted wave.
  • a rotatable attenuator consisting of three wave guide sections A, B, C, the intermediate one B being rotatably connected to the stationary sections A, C, respectively.
  • the wave guide section B is a rotatable phase shifter 2 having a differential phase shift of 180 electrical degrees.
  • the stationary end sections A, C are each provided with quadrature polarization suppressors in the form of attenuating plates, reflecting septa or polarization discriminators in the form of rectangular pipe sections.
  • FIG. 1 there is shown a two-way or bilateral attenuator comprising cylindrical wave guide sections A, B, C.
  • the intermediate wave guide member B is a ISO-degree differential phase shift section, coupled to the stationary end sections A, C by rotatable pipe joints, as more fully disclosed in the aforementioned, concurrently filed Bowen application. It may consist of a short length of cylindrical pipe I, loaded by a metallic fin 2, more fully disclosed in the United States application of W. A. Tyrrell, Serial No. 590,365, filed April 26, 1945. Alternatively, it may be a cylindrical pipe, loaded with shunt rods as disclosed in the United States application of A. G. Fox, Serial No. 464,333, filed November 3, 1942, which has issued as United States Patent 2,438,119, May 23, 1948.
  • the stationary wave guide sections A, C are identical. Each comprises a rectangular wave guide portion 3, a circular pipe 4 integral therewith and connected thereto by a tapered, impedance matching transformer section 5.
  • the rectangular pipe 3 is dimensioned and proportioned so as to only transmit waves of one polarization, for example, waves polarized vertically.
  • the cross-sectional dimensions a, b of the rectangular guide 3 are:
  • the circular pipe 4 contains therein a diametral resistance film absorber or attenuating plate 6 with tapered, impedance matching terminals 1.
  • the plate 6 will absorb all waves polarized at right angles to the input polarization.
  • the operation of the rotatable attenuator A, B, C is as follows: An incident wave (Em) entering section A from the left is initially linearly polarized, whereby Em is perpendicular to side a of the rectangle and plate 6, respectively.
  • the incident wave Em passes freely through guide section A, unaffected in amplitude (see Fig. 2) and enters section B, the -degree phase shift section. If the guide sections A, B, C are arranged in alignment, so that the attenuating plates 6 and fins 2 are coplanar then the incident wave will pass through the entire system A, B, unchanged in phase and amplitude.
  • the vector diagram (Fig. 2) shows schematically how the input wave Em passes through guide section B and emerges as vector E1, unchanged in amplitude but rotated in polarization through an angle 20.
  • the wave E1 may be resolved into two components; one parallel to the attenuating plate 9 thereof and the other perpendicular thereto. The former will be totally absorbed and the latter will be transmitted on toward the load (not shown).
  • E is related to E1, the wave incident on section C by E:E1 cos 20 (1) or the amplitude of the emergent wave E is proportional to the cosine of the angle through which the incident, linear polarization of Em was rotated, and hence can be made to vary from 100 per cent transmission to zero.
  • the output wave E emerges with no a1- teration in phase, as the 180-degree phase shift section B is rotated. Its amplitude however is relative to the input amplitude reduced, proportional to cos 20, where (20) is the angle through which the input polarization has been rotated.
  • the output signal may be taken oif at any desired angle of polarization with respect to the input, and the attenuation will depend only on the cosine of the angle between the polarization of the waves leaving the rotor I and the polarization in the output guide 3.
  • the rotatable attenuator A, B, C illustrated in Fig. 3 is a modification of the form shown in Fig. 1 and differs therefrom only in the 180-degree phase shift section B.
  • the section B is a cylindrical wave guide pipe 9, squashed into an elliptical cross-section near the middle thereof.
  • the transition from circular 10 to elliptical crosssection II is gradual to provide a tapered impedance transformer and maintain an impedance match throughout.
  • the number of degrees of differential phase shift will be determined by the amount of flattening produced and by the length of guide section B which has been fiattened'.
  • the deformed central portion 1 1 serves to split the wave being propagated therethrough into two quadrature components and to speed up waves of one orientation with respect to those having an orientation at right angles thereto.
  • Fig. 4 shows the cross-sectional configurations of the squashed ISO-degree phase shift section B, wherein the contour is elliptical at l l and circular at I!) near the ends thereof.
  • the rotatable attenuator may dispense with the rectangular pipe ends and be comprised of three circular sections of wave guide A, B, C as disclosed in the aforementioned Bowen application, Serial No. 715,589 concurrently filed herewith.
  • the cross-component absorbing plates 6 as disclosed in this application, one may utilize an integral conductive septum and absorption plate for enhanced suppression of quadrature polarizations as disclosed in said Bowen application.
  • a bilateral wave guide attenuator with constant phase shift for linearly polarized input waves comprising a pair of stationary wave guides spaced apart and having a common longitudinal axis, each of said guides being provided with a longitudinal attenuating plate in a common plane containing said axis, means at the free ends of said guides adapted to pass waves linearly polarized perpendicularly to said plates and suppress the orthogonal polarizations, a 188-degree differential phase shift section comprising a Wave guide rotatably connected to each of said stationary sections and having a longitudinal fin, means for rotating said fin and section through an angle 0 with respect to the normal to said plates whereby continuous attenuation without concomitant phase change is provided.

Landscapes

  • Aerials With Secondary Devices (AREA)

Description

Feb. 20, 1951 A. G. FOX 2,542,185
ROTATABLE ATTENUATOR WITHOUT PHASE SHIFT Filed Dec. 11, 1946 HAIVDL E B Isa PHASE SHIFT SECTION INPUT POLARIZATION GUIDE A GUIDE 8 GUIDE C FIN ATTEIVUAT/NG ATTENUATING PLATE 6 PLATE 6 OF 1'4" 0 "c" E IN E OUT 5 IN INVENTOR A. 6. FOX
ATTORN V Patented Feb. 20, 1951 ROTATABLE ATTENUATOR. WITHOUT PHASE SHIFT Arthur Gardner Fox, Eatontown, N. J., assignor to Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated, New York, N. Y., a corporation of New York Application December 11, 1946, Serial No. 715,510
1 Claim.
This invention relates to variable attenuators for wave guides.
An object of the invention is to variably attenuate electromagnetic waves in a wave guide without concomitantly introducing a phase change in the output as the attenuation is adjusted.
Another object of the invention is to continu ously attenuate electromagnetic waves in a wave guide by means of a rotating guide section without introducing any change in output phase as the attenuation is adjusted.
Another object of the invention is to attenuate linearly polarized waves in accordance with a cosine function of the angle of rotation of its polarization, without introducing phase shifts.
Another object of the invention is to attenuate waves transmitted bilaterally through a wave guide without introducing shifts in phase or impedance mismatch.
A feature of the invention is a rotatable 180- degree differential phase shift section of wave guide connected between two stationary wave guide sections, each of the latter being provided with quadrature polarization suppressing devices.
Fig. 1 illustrates a rotatable attenuator in accordance with the invention;
Fig. 2 is an explanatory electric force vector diagram;
Fig. 3 is a modified rotatable attenuator; and
Fig. 4 is a section thereof taken along line 4-4.
Rotatable wave guide attenuators have heretofore been disclosed, for example, in the United States patent applications of A. E. Bowen, Serial No. 715,588, now Patent No. 2,531,194, issued November 21, 1950, and Serial No. 715,589, filed concurrently herewith. Such attenuators are characterized by a capability of attenuating linearly polarized waves as a trigonometric function of 0, the angle of rotation, without concomitant change of polarization direction.
Variable Wave guide attenuators, utilizing resistance films or the like, have been known to introduce undesired phase shifts along with the desired changes in attenuation. However in precision microwave work, a need often arises for wave guide attenuators which can be varied without changing the phase of the transmitted wave.
In accordance with an embodiment of the invention, a rotatable attenuator is provided consisting of three wave guide sections A, B, C, the intermediate one B being rotatably connected to the stationary sections A, C, respectively. The wave guide section B is a rotatable phase shifter 2 having a differential phase shift of 180 electrical degrees. The stationary end sections A, C are each provided with quadrature polarization suppressors in the form of attenuating plates, reflecting septa or polarization discriminators in the form of rectangular pipe sections.
Referring to Fig. 1, there is shown a two-way or bilateral attenuator comprising cylindrical wave guide sections A, B, C.
The intermediate wave guide member B is a ISO-degree differential phase shift section, coupled to the stationary end sections A, C by rotatable pipe joints, as more fully disclosed in the aforementioned, concurrently filed Bowen application. It may consist of a short length of cylindrical pipe I, loaded by a metallic fin 2, more fully disclosed in the United States application of W. A. Tyrrell, Serial No. 590,365, filed April 26, 1945. Alternatively, it may be a cylindrical pipe, loaded with shunt rods as disclosed in the United States application of A. G. Fox, Serial No. 464,333, filed November 3, 1942, which has issued as United States Patent 2,438,119, May 23, 1948.
The stationary wave guide sections A, C are identical. Each comprises a rectangular wave guide portion 3, a circular pipe 4 integral therewith and connected thereto by a tapered, impedance matching transformer section 5. The rectangular pipe 3 is dimensioned and proportioned so as to only transmit waves of one polarization, for example, waves polarized vertically. The cross-sectional dimensions a, b of the rectangular guide 3 are:
where \a. is the wavelength in air. The circular pipe 4 contains therein a diametral resistance film absorber or attenuating plate 6 with tapered, impedance matching terminals 1. The plate 6 will absorb all waves polarized at right angles to the input polarization.
The operation of the rotatable attenuator A, B, C is as follows: An incident wave (Em) entering section A from the left is initially linearly polarized, whereby Em is perpendicular to side a of the rectangle and plate 6, respectively. The incident wave Em passes freely through guide section A, unaffected in amplitude (see Fig. 2) and enters section B, the -degree phase shift section. If the guide sections A, B, C are arranged in alignment, so that the attenuating plates 6 and fins 2 are coplanar then the incident wave will pass through the entire system A, B, unchanged in phase and amplitude. However, if the intermediate guide section B is rotated, so that the fin 2 is inclined 0 degrees to the perpendicular of plane 6-5, then the wave will emerge from section B, unchanged in amplitude, but with its polarization vector rotated through an angle 20, as more fully explained in the aforementioned United States applications of A. G. Fox, Serial No. 464,333 filed November 3, 1942, issued as United States Patent 2,438,119, May 23, 1948, and W. A. Tyrrell, Serial No. 590,365, filed April 26, 1945.
The vector diagram (Fig. 2) shows schematically how the input wave Em passes through guide section B and emerges as vector E1, unchanged in amplitude but rotated in polarization through an angle 20.
In passing through guide section C, the wave E1 may be resolved into two components; one parallel to the attenuating plate 9 thereof and the other perpendicular thereto. The former will be totally absorbed and the latter will be transmitted on toward the load (not shown).
From the vector diagram (Fig. 2) it will be apparent that the Wave which emerges from the system A, B, C is the unabsorbed component E, perpendicular to plate 5.
E is related to E1, the wave incident on section C by E:E1 cos 20 (1) or the amplitude of the emergent wave E is proportional to the cosine of the angle through which the incident, linear polarization of Em was rotated, and hence can be made to vary from 100 per cent transmission to zero.
It should be apparent, however, that the resolution of the Wave E1 into orthogonal components in its passage through section C does not in any way change the time phase of the component E which emerges as the output polarization.
Hence, the output wave E emerges with no a1- teration in phase, as the 180-degree phase shift section B is rotated. Its amplitude however is relative to the input amplitude reduced, proportional to cos 20, where (20) is the angle through which the input polarization has been rotated.
It should be noted that there is no requirement for parallelism between the input and output polarizations. Thus, the output signal may be taken oif at any desired angle of polarization with respect to the input, and the attenuation will depend only on the cosine of the angle between the polarization of the waves leaving the rotor I and the polarization in the output guide 3.
For waves traveling in the opposite direction, from right to left, the action of the rotatable attenuator A, B, C is the same as described, due to the symmetry of the arrangement of corresponding parts.
The rotatable attenuator A, B, C illustrated in Fig. 3 is a modification of the form shown in Fig. 1 and differs therefrom only in the 180-degree phase shift section B. Here, the section B is a cylindrical wave guide pipe 9, squashed into an elliptical cross-section near the middle thereof. The transition from circular 10 to elliptical crosssection II is gradual to provide a tapered impedance transformer and maintain an impedance match throughout. The number of degrees of differential phase shift will be determined by the amount of flattening produced and by the length of guide section B which has been fiattened'. The deformed central portion 1 1 serves to split the wave being propagated therethrough into two quadrature components and to speed up waves of one orientation with respect to those having an orientation at right angles thereto.
Fig. 4 shows the cross-sectional configurations of the squashed ISO-degree phase shift section B, wherein the contour is elliptical at l l and circular at I!) near the ends thereof.
For some applications, the rotatable attenuator may dispense with the rectangular pipe ends and be comprised of three circular sections of wave guide A, B, C as disclosed in the aforementioned Bowen application, Serial No. 715,589 concurrently filed herewith. Likewise, in lieu of the cross-component absorbing plates 6 as disclosed in this application, one may utilize an integral conductive septum and absorption plate for enhanced suppression of quadrature polarizations as disclosed in said Bowen application.
What is claimed is:
A bilateral wave guide attenuator with constant phase shift for linearly polarized input waves comprising a pair of stationary wave guides spaced apart and having a common longitudinal axis, each of said guides being provided with a longitudinal attenuating plate in a common plane containing said axis, means at the free ends of said guides adapted to pass waves linearly polarized perpendicularly to said plates and suppress the orthogonal polarizations, a 188-degree differential phase shift section comprising a Wave guide rotatably connected to each of said stationary sections and having a longitudinal fin, means for rotating said fin and section through an angle 0 with respect to the normal to said plates whereby continuous attenuation without concomitant phase change is provided.
ARTHUR GARDNER FOX.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 2,088,749 King Aug. 3, 1937 2,197,122 Bowen Apr. 16, 1940 2,257,783 Bowen Oct. 4, 1941 2,425,345 Ring Aug. 12, 1947 2,438,119 Fox Mar. 23, 1948 2,441,598 Robertson May 18, 1948 OTHER REFERENCES Proceedings of the I. R. E., October 1946.
US715510A 1946-12-11 1946-12-11 Rotatable attenuator without phase shift Expired - Lifetime US2542185A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US715510A US2542185A (en) 1946-12-11 1946-12-11 Rotatable attenuator without phase shift

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US715510A US2542185A (en) 1946-12-11 1946-12-11 Rotatable attenuator without phase shift

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2542185A true US2542185A (en) 1951-02-20

Family

ID=24874320

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US715510A Expired - Lifetime US2542185A (en) 1946-12-11 1946-12-11 Rotatable attenuator without phase shift

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2542185A (en)

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2588262A (en) * 1947-05-22 1952-03-04 Westinghouse Freins & Signaux Means for varying electromagnetic waves in a wave guide
US2683855A (en) * 1949-11-30 1954-07-13 Raytheon Mfg Co Frequency converter
US2719274A (en) * 1951-07-09 1955-09-27 Gen Precision Lab Inc Microwave switches
US2735092A (en) * 1955-04-04 1956-02-14 Guide space
US2951998A (en) * 1956-04-19 1960-09-06 Philips Corp Waveguide variable impedance apparatus
US2961618A (en) * 1957-06-12 1960-11-22 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Selective mode transducer
US3018454A (en) * 1955-05-16 1962-01-23 Sperry Rand Corp Microwave attenuator switch
US3188585A (en) * 1963-08-28 1965-06-08 Zanichkowsky Martin Waveguide attenuator with vane movable into heightened portion of waveguide
US3702979A (en) * 1971-10-29 1972-11-14 Nasa Rotary vane attenuator wherein rotor has orthogonally disposed resistive and dielectric cards
US3747031A (en) * 1972-04-20 1973-07-17 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Differential attenuator having a zero net differential phase-shift

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2088749A (en) * 1935-10-30 1937-08-03 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Reception of guided waves
US2197122A (en) * 1937-06-18 1940-04-16 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Guided wave transmission
US2257783A (en) * 1939-09-21 1941-10-07 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Guided wave transmission
US2425345A (en) * 1942-12-23 1947-08-12 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Microwave transmission system
US2438119A (en) * 1942-11-03 1948-03-23 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wave transmission
US2441598A (en) * 1944-06-16 1948-05-18 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wave transmission

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2088749A (en) * 1935-10-30 1937-08-03 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Reception of guided waves
US2197122A (en) * 1937-06-18 1940-04-16 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Guided wave transmission
US2257783A (en) * 1939-09-21 1941-10-07 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Guided wave transmission
US2438119A (en) * 1942-11-03 1948-03-23 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wave transmission
US2425345A (en) * 1942-12-23 1947-08-12 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Microwave transmission system
US2441598A (en) * 1944-06-16 1948-05-18 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wave transmission

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2588262A (en) * 1947-05-22 1952-03-04 Westinghouse Freins & Signaux Means for varying electromagnetic waves in a wave guide
US2683855A (en) * 1949-11-30 1954-07-13 Raytheon Mfg Co Frequency converter
US2719274A (en) * 1951-07-09 1955-09-27 Gen Precision Lab Inc Microwave switches
US2735092A (en) * 1955-04-04 1956-02-14 Guide space
US3018454A (en) * 1955-05-16 1962-01-23 Sperry Rand Corp Microwave attenuator switch
US2951998A (en) * 1956-04-19 1960-09-06 Philips Corp Waveguide variable impedance apparatus
US2961618A (en) * 1957-06-12 1960-11-22 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Selective mode transducer
US3188585A (en) * 1963-08-28 1965-06-08 Zanichkowsky Martin Waveguide attenuator with vane movable into heightened portion of waveguide
US3702979A (en) * 1971-10-29 1972-11-14 Nasa Rotary vane attenuator wherein rotor has orthogonally disposed resistive and dielectric cards
US3747031A (en) * 1972-04-20 1973-07-17 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Differential attenuator having a zero net differential phase-shift

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2887664A (en) Faraday-effect device for electro-magnetic waves
Fox An adjustable wave-guide phase changer
US2129669A (en) Guided wave transmission
US2257783A (en) Guided wave transmission
US2546840A (en) Wave guide phase shifter
US2458579A (en) Microwave modulator
US2542185A (en) Rotatable attenuator without phase shift
US2679631A (en) Power divider
US2787765A (en) Magnetically controlled ferrite phase shifter having birefringent properties
US2686901A (en) Turnstile junction for producing circularly polarized waves
US2473274A (en) Ultra high frequency coupling
US2875416A (en) Non-reciprocal wave transmission
US2858512A (en) Apparatus for varying the phase in waveguide systems
US2603710A (en) Rotatable attenuator for wave guides
US2603709A (en) Rotatable wave guide attenuator
US2760166A (en) Directional phase shifter
US2682036A (en) Wave guide power divider
US2767379A (en) Electromagnetic wave equalization
US3317863A (en) Variable ferromagnetic attenuator having a constant phase shift for a range of wave attenuation
US3296558A (en) Polarization converter comprising metal rods mounted on a torsion wire that twists when rotated
US3741625A (en) Polarization-insensitive millimeter-wave directional coupler
US3287730A (en) Variable polarization antenna
US2768354A (en) Gyromagnetic resonance type microwave mode converter
US2768356A (en) Electrical impedance transformer for use at very high frequencies
US2531194A (en) Rotatable vane type attenuator with plug in or out elements