US2576181A - Focusing device for centimeter waves - Google Patents

Focusing device for centimeter waves Download PDF

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Publication number
US2576181A
US2576181A US782521A US78252147A US2576181A US 2576181 A US2576181 A US 2576181A US 782521 A US782521 A US 782521A US 78252147 A US78252147 A US 78252147A US 2576181 A US2576181 A US 2576181A
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disc
center
thickness
focusing device
energy
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US782521A
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Iams Harley
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RCA Corp
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RCA Corp
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01QANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
    • H01Q3/00Arrangements for changing or varying the orientation or the shape of the directional pattern of the waves radiated from an antenna or antenna system
    • H01Q3/12Arrangements for changing or varying the orientation or the shape of the directional pattern of the waves radiated from an antenna or antenna system using mechanical relative movement between primary active elements and secondary devices of antennas or antenna systems
    • H01Q3/14Arrangements for changing or varying the orientation or the shape of the directional pattern of the waves radiated from an antenna or antenna system using mechanical relative movement between primary active elements and secondary devices of antennas or antenna systems for varying the relative position of primary active element and a refracting or diffracting device

Definitions

  • This invention relates to improvements in the art of focusing radio waves, and more particularly to dielectric lenses.
  • the principal object of the invention is to provide a lens capable of focusing with neglible aberration over a wide angle, at a low ratio of focal length to aperture.
  • Another object is to provide a lens which is readily adaptable for scanning purposes, in that it has a relatively sharply curved field which can be scanned conveniently by a feed horn or the like moving in a circular path.
  • a further object of this invention is to provide an improved antenna system producing a narrow directive beam which can be scanned or revolved throughout an angle of 360 degrees in one plane, such as the horizontal.
  • Figure 1 is a plan View of a directive scanning antenna system embodying the invention.
  • Figure 2 is a section in the plane 2-2 of Fig. 1.
  • the illustrated structure includes a disc shaped body I of dielectric material such as polystyrene, parafiin, or sulphur.
  • the disc I is of varying thickness as shown in Fig. 2, being thickest at its center and tapering toward its edge.
  • a wave guide 3 terminates at the edge of the disc I, with its mouth 5 directed radially toward the center of the disc.
  • the mouth 5 may radiate energy as a radiator or receive energy as a receiver.
  • the wave guide 3 extends below the disc I to a point substantially beneath the center, thence downward along the axis of the disc to a utilization device, not shown, such as a radio transmitter or receiver.
  • a rotary joint 1 is included in the vertical portion of the guide 3.
  • the part above the joint is rotatable about the vertical axis, and may be driven by a motor 9.
  • the disc I is substantially entirely immersed in the dielectric medium, in this instance the air through which the radio waves, that is, the electromagnetic energy, to be focused are propagated.
  • Lenses of the above described type either spherical or disc-like, have never been used because of the manifest impracticability of making a body whose refractive index varies in the required manner.
  • the essence of the present invention lies in overcoming this difiiculty.
  • n is the refractive index
  • 1) is the velocity of propagation through the material
  • c is the velocity of propagation through empty space.
  • the disc I is proportioned in accordance with the above or similar data. From the data it is seen that the thickness is less than a free space wavelength.
  • Energy applied to the lower end of the wave guide 3 is radiated from the mouth 5 into the edge of the disc 3 generally toward the center.
  • the energy is refracted substantially as shown by the dash lines II in Fig. 1 and emerges from the opposite edge of the disc in parallel paths with linear phase fronts lying perpendicular to the line extending through the center of the disc and the mouth of the wave guide.
  • the disc I concentrates the more or less diffuse radiation from the wave guide 3 into a beam which is extremely narrow in azimuth.
  • the plane of this beam can be rotated throughout 360 degrees by rotating the mouth 5 of the wave guide 3 about the periphery of the disc I. It will be apparent that the disc I may be rotated with the wave guide or may remain stationary without having any efiect on the performance.
  • a further lens member l3 surrounds the disc I.
  • the lens [3 is in the form of a hollow cylinder tapering from a maximum thickness at its equator to a minim-um at its upper and lower ends.
  • the cylinder I3 is also made of refractive material, and each vertical element of it acts like a two dimensional lens in a plane at right angles to that of the disc I.
  • a device for focusing radio waves in linear phase fronts lying in a single plane comprising a body of dielectric material symmetrical with respect to a line perpendicular to said plane, and having a thickness parallel to said line which varies inversely as the distance from said line in such manner that the efiective refractive index 'n of said body to waves travelling parallel to said plane varies from point to point as:
  • R is the ratio of the radial distance of a point on said body from said line to the maximum radial distance, and means for directing radio waves to be focused toward said body substantially along a radius from said line in said plane.
  • a scanning antenna for radio waves comprising a disc-shaped body of dielectric material, symmetrical about a line extending perpendicularly from the center of said disc, and decreasing in thickness from said center to the edge of said disc, the maximum thickness being less than the wavelength of the energy with which the antenna is to operate; a radiator ad- "4 jacent the periphery of said disc and arranged to direct energy toward the center of said disc, said radiator being movable in a circular path around said periphery.
  • An antenna device comprising a disc-shaped body of dielectric material having a substantially circular periphery and decreasing in thickness from the center to the said periphery of said disc, the maximum thickness being less than a wavelength at the operating frequency, and a radiator or receiver adjacent a point of the periphery of said disc and arranged to direct energy toward the center or receive energy from the center of said disc, said radiator being movable in a circular path around said periphery.
  • the antenna claimed in claim 2 further comprising means to rotate said radiator around said circular path.
  • the antenna device claimed in claim 4 further comprising a motor, said radiator or receiver being driven rotatably about said circular path by said motor.
  • said radiator or receiver comprising a waveguide having an open-mouth portion facing the center of said disc.

Description

Nov. 27, 1951 H. IAMS 2,576,181
F OCUSING DEVICEFOR CENTIMETER WAVES Filed Oct. 28, 1947 TO U TIL/Z4 770/! DE VICE Jn veni'orz Harley lama r y am A ti'orney Patented Nov. 27, 1951 cerium :1
FOCUSING DEVICE FOR CENTIMETER WAVES Harley Iams, Venice, Calif., assignor to Radio Corporation of America, a corporation of Delaware Application October 28, 1947, Serial No. 782,521
7 Claims.
This invention relates to improvements in the art of focusing radio waves, and more particularly to dielectric lenses.
The principal object of the invention is to provide a lens capable of focusing with neglible aberration over a wide angle, at a low ratio of focal length to aperture.
Another object is to provide a lens which is readily adaptable for scanning purposes, in that it has a relatively sharply curved field which can be scanned conveniently by a feed horn or the like moving in a circular path.
A further object of this invention is to provide an improved antenna system producing a narrow directive beam which can be scanned or revolved throughout an angle of 360 degrees in one plane, such as the horizontal.
The invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawing, wherein:
Figure 1 is a plan View of a directive scanning antenna system embodying the invention, and
Figure 2 is a section in the plane 2-2 of Fig. 1.
Similar reference characters are applied to similar elements throughout the drawing.
The illustrated structure includes a disc shaped body I of dielectric material such as polystyrene, parafiin, or sulphur. The disc I is of varying thickness as shown in Fig. 2, being thickest at its center and tapering toward its edge. A wave guide 3 terminates at the edge of the disc I, with its mouth 5 directed radially toward the center of the disc. The mouth 5 may radiate energy as a radiator or receive energy as a receiver. The wave guide 3 extends below the disc I to a point substantially beneath the center, thence downward along the axis of the disc to a utilization device, not shown, such as a radio transmitter or receiver. A rotary joint 1 is included in the vertical portion of the guide 3. The part above the joint is rotatable about the vertical axis, and may be driven by a motor 9. The disc I is substantially entirely immersed in the dielectric medium, in this instance the air through which the radio waves, that is, the electromagnetic energy, to be focused are propagated.
It can be shown theoretically that for a sphere of refracting material in which the index of refraction varies from 1 to v3 according to the formula where R is the ratio of the radial distance from the center to the point under consideration to the radius of the sphere, a distant object will be imaged perfectly upon the surface of the sphere. This formula is derived in Mathematical Theory of Optics by R. K. Luneberg, pp. 208-213. By simple analogy, a disc whose refractive index varies from center to periphery in the same mahnerwill act like a lens, operating in only two dimensions instead of three.
Lenses of the above described type, either spherical or disc-like, have never been used because of the manifest impracticability of making a body whose refractive index varies in the required manner. The essence of the present invention lies in overcoming this difiiculty.
The effective refractive index of a material is inversely proportional to the velocity of propagation of electromagnetic wave energy through the material:
where n is the refractive index, 1) is the velocity of propagation through the material, and c is the velocity of propagation through empty space. I have found that the velocity of propagation of electromagnetic energy through a thin body of dielectric material depends upon the thickness of the body in the direction parallel to the electric vector of the wave. Accordingly, by making the thickness of the disc I vary as a function of distance from the center, it is possible to obtain the same performance as though the refractive index were varied. The relationship between thickness and effective refractive index was determined experimentally for polystyrene at a wave length of 1 A; centimeters, with the following results:
In the system illustrated the disc I is proportioned in accordance with the above or similar data. From the data it is seen that the thickness is less than a free space wavelength. Energy applied to the lower end of the wave guide 3 is radiated from the mouth 5 into the edge of the disc 3 generally toward the center. The energy is refracted substantially as shown by the dash lines II in Fig. 1 and emerges from the opposite edge of the disc in parallel paths with linear phase fronts lying perpendicular to the line extending through the center of the disc and the mouth of the wave guide. Thus the disc I concentrates the more or less diffuse radiation from the wave guide 3 into a beam which is extremely narrow in azimuth. The plane of this beam can be rotated throughout 360 degrees by rotating the mouth 5 of the wave guide 3 about the periphery of the disc I. It will be apparent that the disc I may be rotated with the wave guide or may remain stationary without having any efiect on the performance.
In order to concentrate the radiation to some extent in elevation a further lens member l3 surrounds the disc I. The lens [3 is in the form of a hollow cylinder tapering from a maximum thickness at its equator to a minim-um at its upper and lower ends. The cylinder I3 is also made of refractive material, and each vertical element of it acts like a two dimensional lens in a plane at right angles to that of the disc I.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that a stack of discs I may be used when it is desirable to have a cylindrical lens having a greater cross-section area than is provided by one disc alone.
I claim as my invention:
1. A device for focusing radio waves in linear phase fronts lying in a single plane, comprising a body of dielectric material symmetrical with respect to a line perpendicular to said plane, and having a thickness parallel to said line which varies inversely as the distance from said line in such manner that the efiective refractive index 'n of said body to waves travelling parallel to said plane varies from point to point as:
where R is the ratio of the radial distance of a point on said body from said line to the maximum radial distance, and means for directing radio waves to be focused toward said body substantially along a radius from said line in said plane.
2. A scanning antenna for radio waves, comprising a disc-shaped body of dielectric material, symmetrical about a line extending perpendicularly from the center of said disc, and decreasing in thickness from said center to the edge of said disc, the maximum thickness being less than the wavelength of the energy with which the antenna is to operate; a radiator ad- "4 jacent the periphery of said disc and arranged to direct energy toward the center of said disc, said radiator being movable in a circular path around said periphery.
3. The invention as set forth in claim 2, including a cylindrical wall of dielectric material surrounding said disc, the thickness of said wall varying in such manner that each vertical element thereof constitutes a two dimensional convex lens.
4. An antenna device comprising a disc-shaped body of dielectric material having a substantially circular periphery and decreasing in thickness from the center to the said periphery of said disc, the maximum thickness being less than a wavelength at the operating frequency, and a radiator or receiver adjacent a point of the periphery of said disc and arranged to direct energy toward the center or receive energy from the center of said disc, said radiator being movable in a circular path around said periphery.
5. The antenna claimed in claim 2, further comprising means to rotate said radiator around said circular path.
6. The antenna device claimed in claim 4 further comprising a motor, said radiator or receiver being driven rotatably about said circular path by said motor.
7. The antenna device claimed in claim 6, said radiator or receiver comprising a waveguide having an open-mouth portion facing the center of said disc.
HARLEY IAMS.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Smith Mar. 15, 1949
US782521A 1947-10-28 1947-10-28 Focusing device for centimeter waves Expired - Lifetime US2576181A (en)

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Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2720588A (en) * 1949-07-22 1955-10-11 Nat Res Dev Radio antennae
US2761141A (en) * 1951-08-28 1956-08-28 Malcolm W P Strandberg Continuously varying dielectric constant electromagnetic lens
US2835891A (en) * 1953-11-12 1958-05-20 George D M Peeler Virtual image luneberg lens
US2990545A (en) * 1958-06-17 1961-06-27 Ite Circuit Breaker Ltd Broad-band omnidirectional spherical lens antenna with rotating amplitude modulationpattern
US3173143A (en) * 1958-06-17 1965-03-09 Ite Circuit Breaker Ltd Broad-band omnidirectional spherical lens antenna with rotating amplitude modulationpattern
US3234556A (en) * 1962-02-23 1966-02-08 Robert L Tanner Broadband biconical wire-grid lens antenna comprising a central beam shaping portion
US3255452A (en) * 1964-01-28 1966-06-07 Carlton H Walter Surface wave luneberg lens antenna system
US3255454A (en) * 1964-02-06 1966-06-07 Carlton H Walter Surface wave luneberg lens antenna system
US4318108A (en) * 1977-05-02 1982-03-02 Near Field Technology Co. Bidirectionally focusing antenna
DE3218237A1 (en) * 1982-05-14 1983-11-17 Licentia Patent-Verwaltungs-Gmbh, 6000 Frankfurt Transmitting/receiving antenna
US6822612B2 (en) * 2000-09-27 2004-11-23 Murata Manufacturing Co. Ltd Antenna device, communication apparatus and radar module

Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2247969A (en) * 1937-12-31 1941-07-01 Adlake Co Edge glow lighting system
US2273447A (en) * 1939-09-07 1942-02-17 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Unidirective energy radiating system
US2407318A (en) * 1942-06-18 1946-09-10 Sperry Gyroscope Co Inc High-frequency apparatus
US2415352A (en) * 1944-04-22 1947-02-04 Rca Corp Lens for radio-frequency waves
US2419556A (en) * 1942-07-22 1947-04-29 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Scanning antenna
US2433924A (en) * 1945-08-01 1948-01-06 Henry J Riblet Antenna
US2438343A (en) * 1942-07-09 1948-03-23 Westinghouse Electric Corp High-frequency radiation system
US2460401A (en) * 1941-11-28 1949-02-01 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Directive microwave radio antenna
US2464269A (en) * 1942-06-12 1949-03-15 Raytheon Mfg Co Method and means for controlling the polarization of radiant energy

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2247969A (en) * 1937-12-31 1941-07-01 Adlake Co Edge glow lighting system
US2273447A (en) * 1939-09-07 1942-02-17 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Unidirective energy radiating system
US2460401A (en) * 1941-11-28 1949-02-01 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Directive microwave radio antenna
US2464269A (en) * 1942-06-12 1949-03-15 Raytheon Mfg Co Method and means for controlling the polarization of radiant energy
US2407318A (en) * 1942-06-18 1946-09-10 Sperry Gyroscope Co Inc High-frequency apparatus
US2438343A (en) * 1942-07-09 1948-03-23 Westinghouse Electric Corp High-frequency radiation system
US2419556A (en) * 1942-07-22 1947-04-29 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Scanning antenna
US2415352A (en) * 1944-04-22 1947-02-04 Rca Corp Lens for radio-frequency waves
US2433924A (en) * 1945-08-01 1948-01-06 Henry J Riblet Antenna

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2720588A (en) * 1949-07-22 1955-10-11 Nat Res Dev Radio antennae
US2761141A (en) * 1951-08-28 1956-08-28 Malcolm W P Strandberg Continuously varying dielectric constant electromagnetic lens
US2835891A (en) * 1953-11-12 1958-05-20 George D M Peeler Virtual image luneberg lens
US2990545A (en) * 1958-06-17 1961-06-27 Ite Circuit Breaker Ltd Broad-band omnidirectional spherical lens antenna with rotating amplitude modulationpattern
US3173143A (en) * 1958-06-17 1965-03-09 Ite Circuit Breaker Ltd Broad-band omnidirectional spherical lens antenna with rotating amplitude modulationpattern
US3234556A (en) * 1962-02-23 1966-02-08 Robert L Tanner Broadband biconical wire-grid lens antenna comprising a central beam shaping portion
US3255452A (en) * 1964-01-28 1966-06-07 Carlton H Walter Surface wave luneberg lens antenna system
US3255454A (en) * 1964-02-06 1966-06-07 Carlton H Walter Surface wave luneberg lens antenna system
US4318108A (en) * 1977-05-02 1982-03-02 Near Field Technology Co. Bidirectionally focusing antenna
DE3218237A1 (en) * 1982-05-14 1983-11-17 Licentia Patent-Verwaltungs-Gmbh, 6000 Frankfurt Transmitting/receiving antenna
US6822612B2 (en) * 2000-09-27 2004-11-23 Murata Manufacturing Co. Ltd Antenna device, communication apparatus and radar module

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