Abstract

Control of orbital angular momentum (OAM) offers the potential for increases in control and sensitivity for high-performance microwave systems. EM waves with properties dependent on spatial distribution are said to be “structured.” Control of OAM in microwave systems is an example of a wave structure that exploits EM degrees of freedom, which most conventional systems do not use. OAM is characterized by an integer OAM mode in which zero represents the case of a plane wave and nonzero OAM modes propagate with a helical wavefront. A uniform circular phased array approach is utilized to produce helix-shaped OAM wavefronts. This method offers a critical advantage over common fixed-frequency dielectric lenses; the phases of all antenna elements are programmable across a wide frequency range, which is necessary for ultrawideband (UWB) radar imaging. Simulations and laboratory experiments are performed to determine the requirements and capabilities of an UWB OAM radar that uses the circular phased array approach. Key results include OAM phase front characterization, detection of specified OAM modes, and configuration of a network analyzer UWB radar with synthetic OAM mode-control via signal post-processing.

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