Paper
26 April 2010 Ultra-compact optical true time delay device for wideband phased array radars
Betty Lise Anderson, James G. Ho, William D. Cowan, Olga B. Spahn, Allen Y. Yi, Martin R. Flannery, Delton J. Rowe, David L. McCray, David J. Rabb, Peter Chen
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
An ultra-compact optical true time delay device is demonstrated that can support 112 antenna elements with better than six bits of delay in a volume 16"×5"×4" including the box and electronics. Free-space beams circulate in a White cell, overlapping in space to minimize volume. The 18 mirrors are slow-tool diamond turned on two substrates, one at each end, to streamline alignment. Pointing accuracy of better than 10μrad is achieved, with surface roughness ~45 nm rms. A MEMS tip-style mirror array selects among the paths for each beam independently, requiring ~100 μs to switch the whole array. The micromirrors have 1.4° tip angle and three stable states (east, west, and flat). The input is a fiber-and-microlens array, whose output spots are re-imaged multiple times in the White cell, striking a different area of the single MEMS chip in each of 10 bounces. The output is converted to RF by an integrated InP wideband optical combiner detector array. Delays were accurate to within 4% (shortest delay) to 0.03% (longest mirror train). The fiber-to-detector insertion loss is 7.82 dB for the shortest delay path.
© (2010) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Betty Lise Anderson, James G. Ho, William D. Cowan, Olga B. Spahn, Allen Y. Yi, Martin R. Flannery, Delton J. Rowe, David L. McCray, David J. Rabb, and Peter Chen "Ultra-compact optical true time delay device for wideband phased array radars", Proc. SPIE 7669, Radar Sensor Technology XIV, 76690P (26 April 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.850278
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 1 scholarly publication and 1 patent.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Mirrors

Microelectromechanical systems

Receivers

Signal attenuation

Picosecond phenomena

Phased array optics

Diamond turning

Back to Top