An Extremely Large Ka-Band Reflectarray Antenna for Interferometric SAR: Enabling Next-Generation Satellite Remote Sensing

2020 
The Surface-Water Ocean Topography (SWOT) mission, currently in development at NASA?s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), will employ the Ka-band radar interferometer (KaRIn) to characterize the ocean's height at the unprecedented spatial resolution of 2 km and is designed to provide a global inventory of significant terrestrial water bodies [area g(250 m)2] and rivers (width g50-100 m). The key enabling technology for this instrument is a pair of large, deployable antennas that form the interferometer. This article describes the development of the largest reflectarray antenna currently in process for a spaceflight application: a 5 ? 0.26-m offset-fed reflectarray antenna with a 4.37-m focal length. It details critical aspects of the development, including the radio-frequency (RF) design and analysis, fabrication, and measurement, and discusses unique requirements imposed by the interferometer that resulted in significant design and verification challenges. Flight-hardware measurements demonstrated a gain of approximately 49.5 dB, corresponding to an efficiency of 52%, and an azimuth beamwidth of 0.105?, with a beam-pointing knowledge of 5 millidegrees. Accurate characterization of these antenna-performance parameters is critical to the success of the KaRIn instrument.
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