What is beamwidth of 1.2m prime focus satellite dish with typical F/D ratio?

For a 1.2 m prime-focus parabolic dish, the beamwidth depends mainly on the operating frequency (or wavelength), not strongly on the F/D ratio. A typical prime-focus dish has an F/D between about 0.3 and 0.45.

A commonly used approximation for the half-power beamwidth (HPBW) is:

where:

  • θHPBW = beamwidth in degrees
  • λ = wavelength in metres
  • D = dish diameter in metres

For a 1.2 m dish:

FrequencyWavelengthHPBW
1.42 GHz (Hydrogen line)0.211 m~12.3°
2.4 GHz0.125 m~7.3°
10 GHz0.030 m~1.75°
12 GHz0.025 m~1.46°

For your radio astronomy work at 1420.405 MHz:

  • Diameter = 1.2 m
  • Wavelength = 0.211 m

HPBW ≈ 70 × 0.211 / 1.2 ≈ 12.3°

A more realistic value, depending on illumination taper and feed design, is typically 11°–13°.

The F/D ratio affects the feed geometry and illumination efficiency, but only has a small effect on the final beamwidth compared with the dish diameter and frequency.

Perform calculation for 22GHz for maser observations.

For the water maser line at 22.23508 GHz:

Frequency, f = 22.235 GHz

Dish diameter, D = 1.2 m

First calculate the wavelength:

lambda = c / f

Using c = 299,792,458 m/s:

lambda = 0.01348 m = 13.48 mm

Now apply the beamwidth approximation:

HPBW ~= 70 * lambda / D

HPBW ~= 70 * 0.01348 / 1.2

HPBW ~= 0.79 degrees

which is approximately:

47 arcminutes

2,840 arcseconds

Using the more rigorous expression often used for radio telescopes:

HPBW ~= 58 * lambda / D

gives:

HPBW ~= 0.65 degrees (39 arcminutes)

Therefore a practical estimate for a real 1.2 m dish at 22 GHz is:

Beamwidth ~= 0.65 to 0.8 degrees

Expected Gain

Gain = eta * (pi * D / lambda)^2

Assuming:

Aperture efficiency eta = 0.55

D = 1.2 m

lambda = 0.01348 m

D/lambda ~= 89.0

Gain ~= 43,000 (linear)

Gain(dBi) = 10 * log10(Gain)

Gain ~= 46.3 dBi

Pointing Accuracy

For useful maser observations, pointing errors should ideally be less than about one-tenth of the beamwidth:

0.1 * 0.7 degrees ~= 0.07 degrees

which is:

about 4 arcminutes

about 240 arcseconds

Suitability for Water Maser Work

A 1.2 m dish can detect the strongest Galactic water masers if:

The feed and LNA are optimized for 22 GHz.

System temperature is kept low.

Long integrations are used.

Pointing is accurate to a few arcminutes.

Compared with a 3 m dish:

Signal power ratio = (1.2 / 3.0)^2

= 0.16

so a 3 m dish collects about 6.25 times more signal power.

Strong maser targets include Orion KL, W49A, and W51. A well-constructed 1.2 m system operating at 22 GHz may detect these sources, although integration times will be significantly longer than with a larger dish.

By Admin

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