Electromagnetic cross section of a matched antenna


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Antennas notes.




Scattering parameters for a matched antenna.

Antennas are nearly always reciprocal two port devices. Port one is connected to the transmitter or receiver, and port two is connected to free space. The only exception to this rule is if the (passive) antenna contains ferrite, or if the antenna is described as a unit which contains power combiners or isolators made of ferrite, or if the antenna is an active antenna and is considered as containing an amplifier.

If an antenna is a lossless reciprocal two-port network, then s12 = s21, and by the rules for lossless two-ports (see the notes on scattering parameters ) then the size of s11 is the same as the size of s22.

Moreover if the antenna is matched to the transmitter source, there is no reflected wave back into the transmitter and so the size of s11 must be zero.

It follows that the size of s22 must be zero also, and therefore there is no reflected power from the antenna/receiver combination when external power is incident on the antenna. We assume that the wave incident on the receiver impedance is all absorbed, as this impedance is matched to the feeder impedance. There is thus no reflected wave from the receiver to pass back through the antenna and be re-radiated.

It follows that the electromagnetic cross section (ECS) of a correctly matched antenna is precisely zero, no matter how large the antenna structure may be.

If the antenna is mismatched, there will be some reflected power as s11 = s22 is no longer zero. Note that the antenna can only be matched over a limited bandwidth.

Of course, we must remark here that the illumination on the antenna structure needs to be a time reversed replica of the signal it would emit in transmit mode. So in practice, if the antenna structure is illuminated by a plane wave or an expanding wave, having a totally different structure and originating from a remote radar, it is quite unlikely that these conditions will be met, and there will be scattering from the structure.


A comment

Tom W wrote:

Hi,
Your website says that

quote
It follows that the radar cross section (RCS) of a correctly matched antenna is precisely zero, no matter how large the antenna structure may be.
unquote

This is in contradiction to texts on the subject that state that a dipole is an example of a minimum re-radiative antenna, and that 1/2 of the incident energy on a dipole is delivered to the load (max) and 1/2 is re-radiated as scattering. Not so?

Tom W.


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7th June 2003.