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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Suonanben, Wu, Fengquan, He, Kai, Sun, Shijie, Zhou, Wei, Zhou, Minquan, Zhang, Cong, Xu, Jiaqin, Yan, Qisen, Xu, Shenzhe, Zhu, Jiacong, Wang, Zhao, Zhang, Ke, Miao, Haitao, Li, Jixia, Wang, Yougang, Chen, Tianlu, Chen, Xuelei
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2408.09502
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Table of Contents:
  • Detecting primordial fluctuations from the cosmic dark ages requires extremely large low-frequency radio telescope arrays deployed on the far side of the Moon. The antenna of such an array must be lightweight, easily storable and transportable, deployable on a large scale, durable, and capable of good electrical performance. A membrane antenna is an excellent candidate to meet these criteria. We study the design of a low-frequency membrane antenna for a lunar-based low-frequency (<30 MHz) radio telescope constructed from polyimide film widely used in aerospace applications, owing to its excellent dielectric properties and high stability as a substrate material. We first design and optimize an antenna in free space through dipole deformation and coupling principles, then simulate an antenna on the lunar surface with a simple lunar soil model, yielding an efficiency greater than 90% in the range of 12-19 MHz and greater than 10% in the range of 5-35 MHz. The antenna inherits the omni-directional radiation pattern of a simple dipole antenna in the 5-30 MHz frequency band, giving a large field of view and allowing detection of the 21 cm global signal when used alone. A demonstration prototype is constructed, and its measured electrical property is found to be consistent with simulated results using |S11| measurements. This membrane antenna can potentially fulfill the requirements of a lunar low-frequency array, establishing a solid technical foundation for future large-scale arrays for exploring the cosmic dark ages.