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[Author] Naoki INAGAKI(8hit)

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  • An Efficient ICT Method for Analysis of Co-planar Dipole Antenna Arrays of Arbitrary Lengths

    Adam Icarus IMORO  Ippo AOKI  Naoki INAGAKI  Nobuyoshi KIKUMA  

     
    PAPER-Antennas and Propagation

      Vol:
    E81-B No:3
      Page(s):
    659-667

    A more judicious choice of trial functions to implement the Improved Circuit Theory (ICT) application to multi-element antennas is achieved. These new trial functions, based on Tai's modified variational implementation for single element antennas, leads to an ICT implementation applicable to much longer co-planar dipole arrays. The accuracy of the generalized impedance formulas is in good agreement with the method of moments. Moreover, all these generalized formulas including the radiation pattern expressions are all in closed-form. This leads to an ICT implementation which still requires much shorter CPU time and lesser computer storage compared to method of moments. Thus, for co-planar dipole arrays, the proposed implementation presents a relatively very efficient method and would therefore be found useful in applications such as CAD/CAE systems.

  • An Improved Circuit Theory for the Analysis of Longer Co-planar Dipole Antennas

    Adam Icarus IMORO  Yoshihisa KANI  Naoki INAGAKI  Nobuyoshi KIKUMA  

     
    LETTER-Antennas and Propagation

      Vol:
    E80-B No:2
      Page(s):
    389-394

    The valid region for the application of the conventional Improved Circuit Theory (ICT) in the analysis of wire antennas is established. To further extend the application of ICT to the analysis of much longer antennas, Tai's trial function is used to derive new formulas for the impedance matrix. Unlike the conventional ICT trial function, Tai's trial functions lead to input impedances which are finite irrespective of antenna length. Results of the new ICT impedance formulas are comparable in accuracy with the general method of moments. Moreover, since all the elements of the new formula have been expressed in closed-form, the resulting ICT algorithm is still superior in terms of computer running time with lesser storage requirement compared to other conventional methods like method of moments. This would enhance ICT applications in CAD/CAE systems.

  • Indirect Calculation Methods for Open Circuit Voltages

    Naoki INAGAKI  Katsuyuki FUJII  

     
    PAPER-Electromagnetics

      Vol:
    E91-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1825-1830

    Open circuit voltage (OCV) of electrical devices is an issue in various fields, whose numerical evaluation needs careful treatment. The open-circuited structure is ill-conditioned because of the singular electric field at the corners, and the TEM component of the electric field has to be extracted before integrated to give the voltage in the direct method of obtaining the OCV. This paper introduces the indirect methods to calculate the OCV, the admittance matrix method and the Norton theorem method. Both methods are based on the short-circuited structure which is well-conditioned. The explicit expressions of the OCV are derived in terms of the admittance matrix elements in the admittance matrix method, and in terms of the short circuit current and the antenna impedance of the electrical device under consideration in the Norton theorem method. These two methods are equivalent in theory, but the admittance matrix method is suitable for the nearby transmitter cases while the Norton theorem method is suitable for the distant transmitter cases. Several examples are given to show the usefulness of the present theory.

  • The Method of Matrix-Order Reduction and Its Applications to Electromagnetic Problems

    Wei CAO  Naoki INAGAKI  Di WU  

     
    PAPER-Antennas and Propagation

      Vol:
    E80-B No:4
      Page(s):
    608-616

    A new numerical technique, termed the method of matrix-order reduction (MMOR), is developed for handling electromagnetic problems in this paper, in which the matrix equation resulted from a method-of-moments analysis is converted either to an eigenvalue equation or to another matrix equation with the matrix order in both cases being much reduced, and also, the accuracy of solution obtained by solving either of above equations is improved by means of a newly proposed generalized Jacobian iteration. As a result, this technique enjoys the advantages of less computational expenses and a relatively good solution accuracy as well. To testify this new technique, a number of wire antennas are examined and the calculated results are compared with those obtained by using the method of moments.

  • The Differential CMA Adaptive Array Antenna Using an Eigen-Beamspace System

    Kentaro NISHIMORI  Nobuyoshi KIKUMA  Naoki INAGAKI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E78-B No:11
      Page(s):
    1480-1488

    This paper addresses approaches to enhancement of performance of the CMA (Constant Modulus Algorithm) adaptive array antenna in multipath environments that characterize the mobile radio communications. The cost function of the CMA reveals that it has an AGC (Automatic Gain Control) procedure of holding the array output voltage at a constant value. Therefore, if the output voltage by the initial weights is different from the object value, then the CMA may suffer from slow convergence because suppression of the multipath waves is delayed by the AGC behavior. Our objective is to improve the convergence characteristics by adopting the differential CMA for the adaptive array algorithm. First, the basic performance of the differential CMA is clarified via computer simulation. Next, the differential CMA is incorporated into the eigen-beamspace system in which the eigenvectors of the correlation matrix of array inputs are used in the BFN (Beam Forming Network). This BFN creates the optimum orthogonal multibeams for radio environments and works helpfully as a preprocessor of the differential CMA. The computer simulation results have demonstrated that the differential CMA with the eigen-beamspace system has much better convergence characteristics than the conventional CMA with the element space system. Furthermore, a modified algorithm is introduced which gives the stable array output voltages after convergence, and it is confirmed that the algorithm can carry out more successful adaptation even if the radio environments are changed abruptly.

  • A Novel Adaptive Array Utilizing Frequency Characteristics of Multi-Carrier Signals

    Mitoshi FUJIMOTO  Kunitoshi NISHIKAWA  Tsutayuki SHIBATA  Nobuyoshi KIKUMA  Naoki INAGAKI  

     
    PAPER-Radio Communication

      Vol:
    E83-B No:2
      Page(s):
    371-379

    A novel algorithm for an adaptive array that is suitable for a multi-carrier transmission will be proposed in this paper. In an adaptive array, signals received by antenna elements are weighted and combined together. In the proposed algorithm, distortion of a spectrum of the combined signal is detected and weight coefficients for each antenna element are controlled so that the spectrum of the combined signal becomes flat. Concept of the proposed algorithm can be interpreted as the CMA which is applied to signals sampled in the frequency domain. Furthermore, a configuration of the adaptive array will be shown. Signals separated in a receiver of the multi-carrier transmission are utilized to detect the distortion of the signal spectrum. By adopting the proposed configuration, the spectrum of the multi-carrier signal can be easily detected. In order to investigate the performance of the proposed adaptive array, computer simulation has been carried out. Numerical results show that; 1) A desired wave is captured well even if an interference wave is narrow band signal and is stronger than the desired wave. 2) Suppression performance for a co-channel interference wave depends on both a symbol timing and SIR of arrival waves. If the symbol timing of the interference wave greatly differs from the timing of FFT window of the receiver, the desired wave can be captured even if the co-channel interference wave is stronger more than 10 dB compared with the desired wave. The conventional CMA adaptive array has a serious problem that the narrow band interference wave is captured when it is stronger than the desired wave. On the other hand, it is extremely rare that the proposed adaptive array captures the narrow band interference wave. Therefore, it can be said that the proposed adaptive array is a robust system compared with the conventional system.

  • Hallen Type Integral Equation for Cylindrical Antennas with Finite Gap Excitation

    Di WU  Naoki INAGAKI  Nobuyoshi KIKUMA  

     
    PAPER-Antennas and Propagation

      Vol:
    E82-B No:12
      Page(s):
    2145-2152

    Hallen's integral equation for cylindrical antennas is modified to deal with finite gap excitation. Because it is based on more realistic modeling, the solution is more accurate, and the convergence is guaranteed. The new equation is written with a new excitation function dependent on the gap width. The moment method analysis is presented where the piecewise sinusoidal surface current functions are used in Galerkin's procedure. Total, external and internal current distributions can be determined. Numerical results for cylindrical antennas with wide variety of gap width and radius are shown, and are compared with the numerical results by the Pocklington type integral equation and those by measurement.

  • A Use of Current Continuity Condition in GTD-MM Hybrid Technique

    Xu ZHANG  Naoki INAGAKI  Nobuyoshi KIKUMA  

     
    PAPER-Electromagnetic Theory

      Vol:
    E74-C No:7
      Page(s):
    2055-2060

    A current continuity equation is proposed as the additional equation for the GTD-MM hybrid technique formulation to acquire the uniqueness of the solution which were nonexistent in the conventional formulation with the matching-point equation. The current continuity equation, which ensures the current continuity and satisfies the boundary condition, can directly be written down through equating the MM-region current to the GTD-region current at the regions boundary. It is proved that the current continuity equation is equivalent to the matching-point equation of special case when the matching-point located very close to the boundary, which were able to give the best solution in the conventional formulation with the matching-point equation as explained by Burnside et al. The validity of the new equation is confirmed through the numerical results.

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