Scimitar antenna

A scimitar antenna is a radio antenna so named because its shape resembles a talon-shaped curved sword of the same name. It was invented in 1958 by Edwin M. and William P. Turner. It is essentially a flat metal plate in a semi-circular or semi-elliptical shape with a wide end at one side and a narrow point at the other. Its shape makes it suited for use on aircraft or space vehicles. It was used for VHF communication on the Apollo manned lunar landing program.

A U.S. patent was applied for on October 31, 1958, and granted on December 26, 1961.[1] The inventors assigned the patent to the U.S. government, as represented by the Secretary of the Air Force.

Use in Apollo Program

Apollo Command/Service Module scimitar antenna
Apollo Command/Service Module scimitar antenna

The Apollo Block II Command/Service Module carried a pair of elliptical VHF scimitar antennas on the Service Module walls. The antenna's scimitar shape wasn't externally visible, since it had to be covered by a shroud for aerodynamic purposes. The antenna radiated and received signals in an approximately hemispherical pattern, therefore two antennas were necessary to provide full omnidirectional coverage.[2]

The earlier Block I design of the Apollo spacecraft carried the scimitar antennas inside two semicircular strakes attached near the base of the Command Module, which were intended to improve aerodynamic stability during reentry. However, the strakes were found to be unnecessary, and would have been ineffective at high lunar return reentry speeds. Therefore the strakes were deleted and the antennas were moved to the Service Module in the Block II design used in manned missions.

Apollo 9 EVA showing scimitar antenna
Apollo 9 LM with forward scimitar antenna visible in the left foreground.

The first two Lunar Modules to fly, Apollo 5 and Apollo 9, also carried a pair of VHF scimitar antennas for the transmission of Developmental Flight Instrumentation (DFI) telemetry data.[3] One was located on the front face, just inboard of the right-hand side cockpit window, and the other was located on the left side of the aft equipment bay. Since the Lunar Module never operated in the Earth's atmosphere, no aerodynamic covering was necessary, and the scimitar shape was externally visible. After Apollo 9, the Lunar Module was considered operational, so the DFI and scimitar antennas were not present on subsequent flights.

References

  1. "United States Patent US3015101" (PDF).
  2. "Apollo Operations Handbook: Block II Spacecraft: Volume 1 Spacecraft Description, page 2.8-53" (PDF).
  3. "Apollo 9 Press Kit, page 45" (PDF).
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