18,874 research outputs found
Thin conformal antenna array for microwave power conversions
A structure of a circularly polarized, thin conformal, antenna array which may be mounted integrally with the skin of an aircraft employs microstrip elliptical elements and interconnecting feed lines spaced from a circuit ground plane by a thin dielectric layer. The feed lines are impedance matched to the elliptical antenna elements by selecting a proper feedpoint inside the periphery of the elliptical antenna elements. Diodes connected between the feed lines and the ground plane rectify the microwave power, and microstrip filters (low pass) connected in series with the feed lines provide dc current to a microstrip bus. Low impedance matching strips are included between the elliptical elements and the rectifying and filtering elements
RF beam center location method and apparatus for power transmission system
The receiving element in wireless power transmission systems intercepts the greatest possible portion of the transmitted energy beam. Summing the output energy of all receivers in a planar array makes it possible to determine the location of the center of energy of the incident beam on a receiving array of antenna elements so that the incident beam is in the microwave region
Cost effectiveness of spacecraft pointing antennas
Comparative cost analysis of spacecraft pointing antennas and RF tracking antenna
Large spacecraft antenna study, analytical pattern subtask
Calculation techniques to determine circularly polarized patterns of erectable spacecraft high gain antenna
The influence of wing–wake interactions on the production of aerodynamic forces in flapping flight
We used two-dimensional digital particle image velocimetry (DPIV) to visualize flow patterns around the flapping wing of a dynamically scaled robot for a series of reciprocating strokes starting from rest. The base of the wing was equipped with strain gauges so that the pattern of fluid motion could be directly compared with the time history of force production. The results show that the development and shedding of vortices throughout each stroke are highly stereotyped and influence force generation in subsequent strokes. When a wing starts from rest, it generates a transient force as the leading edge vortex (LEV) grows. This early peak, previously attributed to added-mass acceleration, is not amenable to quasi-steady models but corresponds well to calculations based on the time derivative of the first moment of vorticity within a sectional slice of fluid. Forces decay to a stable level as the LEV reaches a constant size and remains attached throughout most of the stroke. The LEV grows as the wing supinates prior to stroke reversal, accompanied by an increase in total force. At stroke reversal, both the LEV and a rotational starting vortex (RSV) are shed into the wake, forming a counter-rotating pair that directs a jet of fluid towards the underside of the wing at the start of the next stroke. We isolated the aerodynamic influence of the wake by subtracting forces and flow fields generated in the first stroke, when the wake is just developing, from those produced during the fourth stroke, when the pattern of both the forces and wake dynamics has reached a limit cycle. This technique identified two effects of the wake on force production by the wing: an early augmentation followed by a small attenuation. The later decrease in force is consistent with the influence of a decreased aerodynamic angle of attack on translational forces caused by downwash within the wake and is well explained by a quasi-steady model. The early effect of the wake is not well approximated by a quasi-steady model, even when the magnitude and orientation of the instantaneous velocity field are taken into account. Thus, the wake capture force represents a truly unsteady phenomenon dependent on temporal changes in the distribution and magnitude of vorticity during stroke reversal
Rotary antenna attenuator
Radio frequency attenuator, having negligible insertion loss at minimum attenuation, can be used for making precise antenna gain measurements. It is small in size compared to a rotary-vane attenuator
Extracting HI cosmological signal with Generalized Needlet Internal Linear Combination
HI intensity mapping is a new observational technique to map fluctuations in
the large-scale structure of matter using the 21 cm emission line of atomic
hydrogen (HI). Sensitive radio surveys have the potential to detect Baryon
Acoustic Oscillations (BAO) at low redshifts (z < 1) in order to constrain the
properties of dark energy. Observations of the HI signal will be contaminated
by instrumental noise and, more significantly, by astrophysical foregrounds,
such as Galactic synchrotron emission, which is at least four orders of
magnitude brighter than the HI signal. Foreground cleaning is recognised as one
of the key challenges for future radio astronomy surveys. We study the ability
of the Generalized Needlet Internal Linear Combination (GNILC) method to
subtract radio foregrounds and to recover the cosmological HI signal for a
general HI intensity mapping experiment. The GNILC method is a new technique
that uses both frequency and spatial information to separate the components of
the observed data. Our results show that the method is robust to the complexity
of the foregrounds. For simulated radio observations including HI emission,
Galactic synchrotron, Galactic free-free, radio sources and 0.05 mK thermal
noise, we find that we can reconstruct the HI power spectrum for multipoles 30
< l < 150 with 6% accuracy on 50% of the sky for a redshift z ~ 0.25.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figures. Updated to match version accepted by MNRA
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