1999 IEEE.
Personal use of this material is
permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this
material for advertising or promotional purposes or for
creating new collective works for resale or redistribution
to servers or lists, or to reuse any copyrighted component
of this work in other works must be obtained from the
IEEE.
IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation
Volume 47 Number 12, December 1999
Table of Contents for this issue
Complete paper in PDF format
Isophoric Arrays--Massively Thinned
Phased Arrays with Well-Controlled Sidelobes
David G. Leeper, Senior Member, IEEE
Page 1825.
Abstract:
Traditional
filled phased arrays have
an element placed in every location of a uniform lattice with
half-wavelength spacing between the lattice points.
Massively thinned arrays
have fewer than half the elements of their filled counterparts. Such
drastic thinning is normally accompanied by loss of sidelobe control.
This paper describes a class of massively thinned linear and planar
arrays that show well-behaved sidelobes in spite of the thinning. The
term isophoric is derived
from Greek roots to denote uniform
weight. In isophoric arrays, element placement
based on difference sets
forces uniformly weighted spatial coverage. This constraint forces the
array power pattern to pass through V uniformly spaced,
equal, and constant values that are less than 1/K times the
main beam peak, where V is the aperture size in
half-wavelengths and K is the number of elements in the
array. The net result is reduced peak sidelobes, especially when
compared to cut-and-try random-placement approaches. An isophoric array
will exhibit this sidelobe control even when the array has been thinned
to the extent that K is approximately the square root of
V. Where more than one beam must be generated at a time,
isophoric array designs may be used to advantage even within a
traditional filled array. By "interweaving" two isophoric
subarrays within a filled array and by appropriate cyclic shifting of
the element assignments over time, two independent antenna power
patterns can be generated, each with a sidelobe region that is
approximately a constant value of 1/(2K) relative to the
main beam, where K is the number of elements in the
subarray.
References
-
Y. T. Lo and S. W. Lee, "A study of space-tapered
arrays," IEEE Trans. Antennas
Propagat., vol AP-14, pp. 22-30, Jan.
1966.
-
B. D. Steinberg, Principles of Aperture and Array
Systems Design.New York: Wiley, 1976.
-
--, "Comparison between the peak sidelobe of the
random array and algorithmically designed aperiodic arrays,"
IEEE Trans. Antennas Propagat., vol
AP-21, pp. 366-370, May 1973.
-
R. L. Haupt, "Thinned arrays using genetic algorithms,"
IEEE Trans. Antennas Propagat., vol.
42, pp. 993-999, July 1994.
-
S. Holm, "Properties of the beampattern of
weight-layout-optimized sparse arrays," IEEE
Trans. Ultrason., Ferroelect., Frequency Contr., vol.
44, pp. 983-991, Sept. 1997.
-
P. K. Weber, R. M. Schmitt, B. D. Tylkowski, and J. Steck,
"Optimization of random sparse 2-D transducer arrays for 3-D
electronic beam steering and focusing," in Proc.
IEEE Ulstrason. Symp., 1994, vol. 3, pp.
1503-1506.
-
D. J. O'Neill, "Element placement in thinned arrays using
genetic algorithms," Proc.
Oceans'94, vol. 2, pp. 301-306, Sept.
1994.
-
A. Trucco, "Synthesis of aperiodic planar arrays by a
stochastic approach," in Proc.
Oceans'97, 1997, pp. 820-825.
-
E. Brookner, Practical Phased Array Antenna
Systems.Norwood, MA: Artech House,
1991.
-
D. G. Leeper, Sidelobe Control in Sub-Nyquist
Sampling, Ph.D. dissertation, Univ. Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, Elect. Eng. Sci., 1977.
-
--, U.S. Patent 4071848,
"Thinned aperiodic antenna arrays with improved peak sidelobe
level control," Jan. 1978.
-
M. Hall, Jr., Combinatorial
Theory, 2nd ed.New York: Wiley, 1986.
-
L. D. Baumert, Cyclic Difference
Sets.New York: Springer-Verlag, 1971.
-
W. Wesley Peterson, Error-Correcting
Codes.Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1961.
-
S. W. Golomb, Digital Communications with Space
Applications.Englewood Cliffs, NJ:
1964.
-
Y. T. Lo, "Random periodic arrays,"
Radio Sci., vol. 3, no. 5, pp.
425-436, May 1968.
-
--, "A mathematical theory of antenna arrays with
randomly spaced elements," IEEE Trans. Antennas
Propagat., vol. AP-12, pp. 257-268, May
1964.
-
B. D. Steinberg, "The peak sidelobe of the phased array
having randomly located elements," IEEE Trans.
Antennas Propagat., vol AP-20, pp. 129-136, Mar.
1972.
-
N. J. A. Sloane and F. J. MacWilliams, "Pseudorandom
sequences and arrays," Proc.
IEEE, vol. 64, pp. 1715-1729, Dec. 1976.