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    Applications of Microwave Technology in Radar, Satellite, and Wireless Communication Systems

    TL;DR 

    • This blog is for university students, engineering freshers, and learners entering the field of electronics and communication. This article provides a structured, technically accurate introduction to microwave technology applications across radar, satellite, and wireless communication systems.
    • Microwaves occupy the electromagnetic spectrum between 300 MHz and 300 GHz. Their short wavelength, high frequency and atmospheric penetration capability make them preferred medium for long distance communication and precision detection.
    • In radar systems, microwave pulses are transmitted toward targets and reflected signals are analyzed to determine position, velocity, and distance of objects, a principle applied in air traffic control, meteorology and defense.
    • Satellite microwave communication relies on designated frequency bands to transmit signals between ground stations and orbiting relay stations across thousands of kilometers.
    • Wireless technologies including Wi Fi, Bluetooth, and 5G networks all operate within defined microwave frequency bands, making microwave engineering central to modern telecommunications infrastructure.

    Microwave technology forms an essential part of modern communication and sensing infrastructure. Microwave frequencies are essential for a wide range of critical applications, including weather monitoring systems, air traffic control networks, satellite broadcasting platforms, and mobile communication networks, which require precision and reliability that is demanded by today’s society.

    Every second, billions of bits of data are transmitted worldwide through microwave communication systems. Understanding the working principles and applications of microwave systems is essential for students pursuing careers in the field of electronics, telecommunications, defense technology or wireless.

    This article provides a systematic overview of the applications of microwave technology in radar, satellite communication and wireless systems, starting from the physical properties of microwaves.

    Also Read:

    Understanding Microwave Technology

    The wavelengths of the microwaves are in the range of 1 mm to 1 m (300 MHz to 300 GHz). The microwave region lies between conventional radio frequencies and infrared radiation on the electromagnetic spectrum.

    The physical properties of microwaves determine their suitability for different engineering applications. There are four properties which are of special importance in engineering applications:

    High Frequency and Large Bandwidth: The microwave band is some 30 times as wide as the entire radio spectrum underneath. This large bandwidth directly corresponds with a high information carrying capacity, which means that a large amount of data can be sent with a high speed.

    Short Wavelength and High Resolution: The shorter the wavelength, the greater the ability of a wave to resolve fine spatial detail. In radar and remote sensing, this means microwave systems can detect smaller objects and distinguish between closely spaced targets with greater accuracy than lower frequency systems.

    Atmospheric Penetration: Microwaves in lower frequency bands, particularly L band and C band, can pass through cloud cover, rain, fog, and atmospheric particulates with minimal signal degradation. This property is critical for radar systems that must operate reliably under all weather conditions.

    Line of Sight Propagation: Unlike lower frequency radio waves that bend around Earth’s curvature, microwaves travel in straight lines. While this limits direct transmission range, it also makes them highly directional and efficient when transmitted as narrow beams between fixed points or toward orbiting satellites.

    These properties collectively explain why microwave frequencies are preferred medium for radar, satellite, and wireless communication systems worldwide.

    Application of Microwave in Radar Systems

    Operating Principle of Microwave Radar

    One of the most important and common uses of microwaves is in radar. It works by transmitting a tightly focused pulse of microwave energy toward a target area and analyzing the reflected signals received back by the antenna to pick up some of the energy that is reflected by objects within the path of the signal.

    Distance between radar system and target is directly proportional to elapsed time between the transmission and reception of reflected pulse. The speed of light is about 3 × 10⁸ meters per second, therefore accurate measurements of time enable system to accurately determine target range.

    In addition to range, radar systems also use the Doppler shift to measure the speed of a moving target. A moving object that reflects a microwave pulse causes the frequency of the reflected pulse to change when compared to the frequency of the transmitted pulse; the magnitude and direction of this change in frequency is related to the radial velocity of the target object, allowing radar systems to determine not only the location, but also the speed and direction of the target’s motion.

    Why Microwaves Are Selected for Radar Applications

    The choice of microwave frequencies for radar is dictated by technical needs. Radio waves with longer wavelengths have poor spatial resolution for detection of small targets, or close targets. Optical and infrared systems can achieve very high resolutions, but are very restricted by the atmosphere.

    Microwaves provide a functional middle ground between low-frequency radio waves and optical systems. They have shorter wavelengths, which help resolve individual aircraft, vessels, and weather formations with greater accuracy. They are able to penetrate the atmosphere and operate reliably under most weather and lighting conditions, regardless of weather or time of day; they transmit microwave energy in narrow directed beams, reducing the loss of signal and increasing the detection range.

    Furthermore, microwave radar systems can be designed to be small enough to be used on aircraft, ships, vehicles, and satellites, as well as on the ground.

    Real World Applications of Microwave Radar

    Application of microwave in radar spans multiple critical sectors:

    Air Traffic Control: Airport surveillance radar systems are used to monitor the position, altitude and velocity of aircraft in controlled airspace at all times. Primary radar is used to detect physical reflections from aircraft and Secondary Surveillance Radar is used to read data from transponders on-board the aircraft to achieve identification and altitude data. Both use microwave frequency to offer controllers with real-time situational awareness in managing airspace safety.

    Meteorological Radar: Weather radar networks can also detect precipitation, measure the intensity of rainfall, track the movement of storms, monitor severe weather formations such as tornadoes and typhoons, and do all of these using microwave pulses. Doppler weather radar is used to get wind speed and direction estimates inside storm systems from the frequency change of a radar echo from precipitation particles.

    Military and Defense Systems: Defense uses: Airspace surveillance, Missile detection and tracking, Ballistic missile early warning, Naval vessel detection, and Battlefield surveillance. Military radars tend to work across various microwave frequency bands, and are designed for long detection ranges, high discrimination of the target, and resistance to electronic countermeasures.

    Maritime Navigation: The radar systems used on ships enable them to operate safely in low visibility conditions, to avoid collisions with other ships and obstacles, to keep track of docked ships and other hazards in ports, and to perform search and rescue missions at sea.

    Automotive Radar: Today’s advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) rely on short range microwave radar sensors in the 24 GHz and 77 GHz frequency bands. Detecting distance and relative velocity of surrounding objects continuously allows these sensors to be used for adaptive cruise control, automatic emergency braking, blind spot detection, and lane change assistance.

    Synthetic Aperture Radar: The systems on aircraft and satellites, called SAR, provide detailed surface maps of terrain, as well as deforestation, ice sheet change, and flood extent monitoring. SAR is of particular value for continuous earth observing applications because it is able to penetrate cloud cover.

    Satellite Microwave Communication: Connecting World from Orbit

    Architecture of Satellite Communication

    A communication satellite is a microwave relay station in orbit around the Earth. Its main function is to receive an uplink signal, amplify and frequency convert it, and retransmit it as a downlink signal to receiving stations at remote locations on the earth’s surface.

    In this type of architecture, satellite microwave communication can be used to span distances beyond the reach of terrestrial systems, such as transoceanic communication links, to coverage of remote areas, and to broadcast distribution to geographical spreads of receivers.

    Uplink and Downlink Frequencies

    The satellite communication system uses separate frequencies for each path: ground station to the satellite and the satellite to the ground station. The separation is technically required since if both were on the same frequencies, a strong downlink signal from the satellite would mask a weaker signal from the satellite uplink.

    The uplink frequency is always higher than the downlink frequency in the same band, which is the purpose of the satellite’s transponder receiving uplink frequency, performing frequency down conversion, amplifying the frequency and then retransmitting it at a lower frequency. It is a frequency translation process which is essential for the application of all the commercial and governmental satellites communication systems.

    Microwave Frequency Bands in Satellite Communication

    Different frequency bands within the microwave spectrum are allocated for specific satellite communication applications. Each band presents distinct trade offs between signal capacity, antenna size, weather sensitivity, and propagation characteristics.

    L Band (1 – 2 GHz): Primarily used for GPS navigation systems and mobile satellite telephone services. L band signals experience minimal atmospheric attenuation and are suitable for portable receiving equipment, though available bandwidth limits data throughput.

    C Band (4 –  8 GHz): most widely deployed band in satellite communication. Standard C band systems use an uplink of approximately 6 GHz and a downlink of approximately 4 GHz. C band is favored for television distribution, telephony backhaul, and data networking because of its relative immunity to rain attenuation. Larger receiving antenna dishes are typically required for C band reception.

    Ku Band (12 – 18 GHz): Used extensively for direct to home television broadcasting and VSAT broadband internet services. higher frequency allows use of smaller receiving dishes. However, Ku band signals are more susceptible to rain attenuation than C band systems.

    Ka Band (26.5 – 40 GHz): highest frequency band in common satellite use, Ka band supports very high data rates and is deployed for high throughput satellite broadband internet services. Ka band systems can deliver gigabit class capacity but require robust link margins to compensate for greater atmospheric absorption and rain fade.

    Geostationary vs. Non Geostationary Satellite Systems

    Geostationary satellites orbit at an altitude of about 35,786 km over the equator and are the most common to be used for most traditional satellite communication services. The satellite’s orbit around the earth is the same length as the earth’s rotation, so that it can be seen as if it is fixed above the earth. This makes it easier to point the antenna and allows for continuous coverage over a wide area.

    Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites operate at altitudes between 500-2,000 km; they provide much lower signal latency and are being increasingly used to provide global broadband internet coverage. LEO systems will necessitate more sophisticated tracking antennas, and intersatellite coordination for handoffs as the satellites move overhead.

    Application of Microwave in Wireless Communication System

    Microwave Frequencies in Modern Wireless Networks

    Wireless microwave communication includes terrestrial and personal-area networking technologies that function within the microwave frequency spectrum, the assignment of which is regulated by international bodies so that they do not interfere with each other.

    Bluetooth (2.4 GHz ISM Band): A short range wireless protocol designed for device to device communication within distances typically limited to 10 meters. Bluetooth uses frequency hopping spread spectrum across 2.4 GHz band to minimize interference with co-located wireless systems.

    Wi-Fi (2.4 GHz and 5 GHz Bands): IEEE 802.11 family of standards defines Wi Fi protocols operating in both 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz microwave bands. The 2.4 GHz band offers greater range but lower maximum throughput and higher network congestion. The 5 GHz band provides higher data rates and reduced interference, with correspondingly reduced effective range.

    4G LTE: Fourth generation mobile networks operate across a range of bands, with the upper portion of LTE spectrum entering the microwave range. LTE networks use Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access to efficiently allocate spectrum among multiple simultaneous users.

    5G NR (Sub 6 GHz and mm Wave Bands): Fifth generation networks operate across two distinct frequency ranges. sub 6 GHz range provides broad coverage with moderate data rates, while millimeter wave deployments at 24 GHz, 28 GHz, and 39 GHz deliver peak data rates of several gigabits per second. Mm Wave signals have limited range and are readily attenuated by physical obstacles, necessitating dense small cell deployment in urban environments.

    Microwave Backhaul and Point to Point Links

    Microwave backhaul technology is vital for connecting cell towers to the core network infrastructure. These are point to point microwave links to carry aggregated user traffic between base stations and regional network hubs, usually in the licensed frequency band of 6 GHz to 86 GHz. Today’s backhaul systems operate with multiple gigabits per second of throughput with high-order modulation and adaptive antenna technology.

    For the past few years, before the extensive use of fiber optic, the long distance telephony network made extensive use of a series of microwave repeater stations about 50-70 km apart, which meant that each repeater station had to be in direct visual line of sight of the other stations and thus had to be located on elevated ground.

    Microwave Technology in 5G and 6G Research

    The deployment of 5G networks is the most complicated use of microwave technology in commercial wireless communications to date. Network operators design deployments that combine both wide area coverage of sub 6 GHz bands with ultra high capacity of mm Wave bands, including use of massive MIMO antenna arrays, beam forming and carrier aggregation.

    Terahertz frequencies between 100 GHz and 10 THz are now being investigated in the research for 6G systems and these frequencies theoretically support data rates in the terabits-per-second range. Microwave photonics, which combines microwave engineering and photonic signal processing, is actively being pursued as an enabling technology for the generation of 6G signals and fiber wireless hybrid network distribution.

    Additional Applications of Microwave Technology

    Radar, satellite communication, and wireless networks represent three primary domains, but microwave technology applications extend into several other significant fields:

    GPS Navigation Systems: Global Positioning System operates at L1 and L2 microwave frequencies. Ground based receivers calculate precise position by measuring signal arrival time differences from a minimum of four satellites simultaneously. The accuracy and availability of GPS depend heavily on reliable microwave signal transmission and reception.

    Medical Applications: Microwave energy is applied clinically in diathermy treatments that deliver controlled deep tissue heating for musculoskeletal physiotherapy. Microwave ablation, operating typically at 915 MHz or 2.45 GHz, uses focused microwave energy to destroy tumor tissue in oncological procedures, providing a minimally invasive alternative to surgical resection.

    Radio Astronomy: Large aperture microwave antenna systems and phased antenna arrays enable astronomers to detect and analyze faint microwave emissions from distant astronomical objects. Cosmic Microwave Background radiation, a remnant of the early universe, is studied exclusively in the microwave spectrum. Microwave frequency observations have contributed substantially to development of modern cosmological models.

    Earth Observation and Remote Sensing: Satellite borne microwave radiometers and SAR instruments provide continuous monitoring of Earth’s surface and atmosphere. Applications include sea surface temperature measurement, soil moisture mapping, glaciological surveys, agricultural monitoring, and disaster assessment. Microwave sensors operate effectively through cloud cover, enabling data acquisition irrespective of surface meteorological conditions.

    Industrial and IoT Systems: Industrial microwave sensors and communication modules support smart manufacturing automation, pipeline monitoring, structural health monitoring, and asset tracking in environments where wired infrastructure is impractical. IoT devices operating in 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands communicate sensor data wirelessly across factory floors and infrastructure networks.

    Relevance of Microwave Technology in Engineering Education and Career Development

    Knowledge of microwave engineering forms the foundation of various advanced fields of electronics and communication engineering. Students specializing in telecommunications, RF and antenna design, satellite systems, defense electronics, wireless network planning or IoT infrastructure will find microwave fundamentals in a variety of technical specializations.

    Each of these application areas relies on core concepts such as transmission line theory, waveguide propagation, antenna characteristics, signal modulation, etc., and the link budget analysis.

    By developing a structured understanding of microwave properties and system behavior, students will be able to discuss sophisticated topics like 5G network architecture, phased array radar design, high throughput satellite systems, and future directions for 6G research.

    Conclusion

    Microwave technology plays a central role in modern communication and sensing systems. Microwave frequencies transmit large quantities of data rapidly and precisely, so they are used for radar, satellite communication, WiFi, mobile networks, and even monitoring the weather. They possess certain characteristics that make them suitable for high-end wireless applications, including their high bandwidth, short wavelength, and reliable signal transmission.

    With the emerging technologies such as 5G, IoT, satellite internet and the upcoming 6G systems, the significance of microwave engineering is increasing even more. In the world of engineering, knowing about the applications of microwaves can give students a solid basis for their future in telecommunication, defense, aerospace, networking, and wireless system design, and help them understand how modern global communication infrastructure operates.

    FAQS

    The frequency range of microwaves is between 300 MHz and 300 GHz. These values are important as this represents the range of high bandwidth, short wavelength and atmospheric penetration. This is why microwave frequencies are typically used in the fields of radar and satellite or wireless communication.

    A radar system works by transmitting short pulses of microwave energy into a target region.. A portion of the pulse energy will be reflected back toward the receiving antenna when the pulse strikes an object. Target range is calculated using the round trip travel time of the system. Doppler frequency shift of reflected signal gives velocity of the target. This concept is used in air traffic control, weather forecasting, military defense and vehicle safety systems.

    L band is used for mobile satellite services and GPS, C band is used for broadcast distribution and mobile telephone services with high weather resistance, Ku band is used for direct to home television and VSAT internet services using smaller receive dishes and Ka band is used for high throughput broadband services. Higher frequency bands provide more capacity, but are more vulnerable to degradation caused by the atmosphere.

    The microwave portion of the spectrum is used by Wi Fi, Bluetooth, 4G LTE and 5G networks. These microwave frequency bands are used in wireless communication technologies to send data from one device to another or to a base station, while factors such as range, signal penetration, and data capacity influence their performance through physical structures. In addition to its use for backhauls, the microwave backhaul also serves as transmission infrastructure between base stations and the core network.

    The Doppler effect is the change in observed frequency of a wave, due to relative motion between the source and the receiver.In radar, the frequency of a microwave pulse reflected by a moving object is slightly different from the frequency of the transmitted pulse. This frequency shift is proportional to the target’s radial velocity. This is the principle applied to Doppler radar systems, which measure the speed of aircraft, precipitation in a weather system, and other moving objects.

    The 5G networks operate across two major frequency ranges. Sub 6 GHz microwave bands offer broad area coverage and moderate data rates, and are the main coverage layer for 5G deployments. 24 39 GHz millimeter wave bands provide very high data rates in dense urban areas, but are constrained by range and are highly attenuated by physical obstacles, requiring a dense small cell network. Also, microwave point to point links are used as backhaul for 5G base stations where fibre connections cannot be provided.

    Tags: application of microwave in radar, microwave technology applications, satellite microwave communication

    Top Microwave Experiments Every Electronics and Communication Student Should Perform

    TL;DR

    • This blog is written for ECE students, engineering freshers, and learners entering a microwave lab for the first time. This guide provides clear, practical explanations of every core experiment.
    • Microwave lab experiments are directly tied to real world technologies including radar, satellite communication, 5G networks, and GPS systems.
    • Key experiments such as VSWR measurement, Gunn diode characterization and Magic Tee analysis form the foundation of RF and microwave engineering practice.
    • Familiarity with instruments like waveguide benches, VSWR meters, slotted lines, and Gunn power supplies significantly improves lab performance and measurement accuracy.
    • Students who complete these microwave experiments with conceptual clarity are well prepared for careers in telecom, defense electronics, aerospace, and wireless communication research.

    Also Read:

    What Is a Microwave Engineering Lab and Why Does It Matter?

    A microwave engineering lab is a practical training environment where ECE students work with actual microwave hardware like waveguide components, signal sources, detectors, and measurement instruments. Experiments performed here translate theoretical knowledge from subjects like Electromagnetic Field Theory and Antenna and Wave Propagation into measurable, repeatable results.

    Microwave lab experiments help students develop four important industry relevant skills:

    • Signal generation and source characterization
    • Transmission line analysis and impedance matching
    • Passive component measurement and verification
    • Antenna characterization

    Every microwave experiment in this guide helps students build one or more important practical skills.

    Experiment 1 – Study of Gunn Diode Characteristics

    Overview

    Gunn diode is a solid state microwave signal source based on the transferred electron effect in gallium arsenide semiconductor material. When a DC bias voltage exceeding a threshold value is applied, the device exhibits negative resistance, a condition in which increasing voltage decreases current. This negative resistance property sustains microwave frequency oscillations within the associated waveguide cavity.

    Gunn diode is compact, reliable, and serves as the primary signal source in most university microwave bench setups.

    Experiment Objectives

    • Plot V-I characteristics of Gunn diode
    • Identify threshold voltage at which device begins exhibiting negative resistance
    • Measure output power and oscillation frequency as a function of bias voltage

    Lab Setup

    The experiment uses a Gunn power supply, a Gunn oscillator mounted in a waveguide section, a PIN modulator, isolator, variable attenuator, frequency meter, slotted line, detector mount, and VSWR meter. Gunn power supply bias voltage is varied in steps, and corresponding current and output power readings are recorded.

    Safety Note

    Gunn diodes are thermally sensitive, bias voltage must not exceed 10V, and cooling fan must be operational at all times during experiment. Prolonged operation at high voltage without cooling causes permanent device damage.

    Industry Relevance

    Gunn diodes are used in radar proximity sensors, automotive collision avoidance systems, microwave communication links, and motion detection equipment. In the lab, the Gunn oscillator serves as a signal source for most subsequent experiments, making its characterization an essential starting point.

    Experiment 2 – Reflex Klystron Characteristics

    Overview

    Reflex klystron is a vacuum tube based microwave oscillator. An electron beam emitted from a cathode is accelerated through a resonant cavity and then reflected back by a negatively biased electrode called repeller. Reflected electrons re enter cavity in bunches, delivering energy at the correct phase to sustain oscillations.

    The frequency and power output of the klystron are controlled by adjusting the repeller voltage, which determines the transit time of electrons in the repeller space.

    Experiment Objectives

    • Draw a graph to show how output power changes when the repeller voltage is changed.
    • Identify different oscillation modes and their corresponding repeller voltage ranges
    • Calculate Electronic Tuning Sensitivity frequency change per unit change in repeller voltage

    Lab Setup

    klystron power supply provides beam voltage, heater voltage, and variable reflector voltage. klystron is mounted in a waveguide section connected to an isolator, attenuator, frequency meter, and detector. Beam voltage is set first, followed by variation of reflector voltage to observe mode transitions.

    Industry Relevance

    Reflex klystrons were used historically in radar receivers and microwave test equipment. While solid state sources have replaced them in many applications, klystrons remain relevant in high power applications such as satellite communication uplinks and particle accelerators. Studying this device provides a foundational understanding of velocity modulation, a principle also applied in traveling wave tubes  used in satellite transponders.

    Experiment 3 – VSWR Measurement (Voltage Standing Wave Ratio)

    Overview

    When a microwave signal traveling along a transmission line encounters an impedance discontinuity, a portion of the signal reflects back toward the source. incident and reflected waves superpose to create a standing wave pattern along the line. Voltage Standing Wave Ratio quantifies severity of this mismatch.

    VSWR is defined as ratio of maximum to minimum voltage amplitude along standing wave:

    VSWR = V_max / V_min

    A VSWR of 1 indicates perfect impedance matching with no reflections. Higher values indicate progressively worse mismatch and greater reflected power.

    Experiment Objectives

    • Measure VSWR for a given load using slotted line method
    • Calculate reflection coefficient from VSWR value
    • Apply double minimum method for loads with VSWR greater than 10

    Lab Setup

    The microwave bench consists of a signal source, isolator, variable attenuator, slotted waveguide section with a movable probe, detector mount, and VSWR meter. The probe is moved along a slotted section to locate positions of maximum and minimum signal amplitude. The ratio of these values gives VSWR directly.

    For loads with very high VSWR, the minimum signal point becomes very sharp and hard to measure accurately. In this case, the double minimum method is used. The probe is moved to find two points on both sides of the minimum where the power becomes twice the minimum value. The distance between these two points is then used to calculate the VSWR.

    Industry Relevance

    VSWR measurement is one of the most fundamental diagnostic tools in RF and microwave engineering. Every transmission system, including antenna feeds, waveguide connections, coaxial assemblies, and PCB transmission lines, must be characterized for VSWR to ensure efficient power transfer. High VSWR in a radar or satellite system results in wasted transmit power and degraded signal quality. In 5G base station commissioning, VSWR verification is a mandatory step before a site is declared operational.

    Experiment 4 – Frequency and Wavelength Measurement in a Rectangular Waveguide

    Overview

    A rectangular waveguide supports electromagnetic wave propagation in specific modes. Dominant mode is TE10 mode, where the electric field is entirely transverse to propagation direction with a single half wave variation across broad dimensions.

    Inside a waveguide, guide wavelength differs from free space wavelength. These are related through cutoff wavelength:

    1/λ0 = √1/λc² + 1/λg²

    For TE10 mode: λc = 2a, where a is a broad dimension of waveguide.

     

    Experiment Objectives

    • Measure guide wavelength using slotted line
    • Determine signal frequency using Frequency meter
    • Verify theoretical relationship between guide wavelength, free space wavelength, and cutoff wavelength

    Lab Setup

    A Frequency meter is a precision resonant cavity coupled to a waveguide. When tuned to signal frequency, it absorbs power and creates a sharp dip on the VSWR meter. corresponding reading is directly read on frequency meter.

    Guide wavelength is measured by locating two successive standing wave minima along a slotted line, distance between consecutive minima equals half guide wavelength.

    Industry Relevance

    Inside a waveguide, the speed and wavelength of a signal change depending on its frequency. Engineers must consider this while designing devices like filters, couplers, and feed systems. These parts are commonly used in satellite communication, radar systems, and long distance wireless communication networks.

    Experiment 5 – Directional Coupler Characteristics

    Overview

    A directional coupler is a four port passive microwave component that extracts a controlled fraction of power traveling in a specified direction through a transmission line, without disturbing the main signal path significantly.

    Four ports are: input, through, coupled and isolated. Most input power passes through the port. A small, precisely defined fraction is delivered to the coupled port. A signal traveling in reverse through the device is directed to isolated ports, with negligible power at coupled ports.

    Key Parameters

    • Coupling Factor – Ratio of coupled port power to input power. A 20 dB coupler delivers 1% of input power to the coupled port.
    • Isolation – Attenuation of reverse signal at coupled port.
    • Directivity – Difference between isolation and coupling factor, measuring coupler’s ability to discriminate between forward and reverse signals.

    Lab Setup

    A coupler is inserted into the waveguide bench between source and load. Detector and VSWR meter readings are taken at each port, with remaining ports terminated in matched loads. Port terminations are switched systematically to measure coupling factor, isolation, and through line insertion loss.

    Industry Relevance

    Directional couplers are essential components in power monitoring, reflectometers, automatic level control circuits, and network analyzers. Every vector network analyzer uses directional couplers internally to separate incident and reflected signal components, making this experiment directly relevant to understanding instruments that characterize virtually all RF and microwave components in professional settings.

    Experiment 6 – Scattering Parameters of Magic Tee

    Overview

    Magic Tee is a four port waveguide junction that combines an E-plane T-junction and an H-plane T-junction shunt arm in a single structure. Its defining characteristic is mutual isolation between its E-arm and H-arm ports.

    When H-arm is excited, the signal divides equally and in phase between two collinear ports, with no output at E-arm. When E-arm is excited, the signal divides equally but with a 180-degree phase difference between collinear ports, with no output at H-arm.

    Experiment Objectives

    • Measure scattering parameters of Magic Tee
    • Verify mutual isolation between E-arm and H-arm
    • Confirm equal power division and phase relationship at collinear ports

    Lab Setup

    Magic Tee is connected to a waveguide bench with each unused port terminated in a matched load. The signal source is applied to each port in turn, and power levels at remaining ports are measured. S-parameters are calculated from power ratios.

    Industry Relevance

    Magic Tees are used in radar duplexers to isolate transmitter from receiver while sharing a single antenna, in microwave balanced mixers and in antenna feed networks that require 180-degree hybrid junctions. The S-parameter framework introduced in this experiment is a universal standard for characterizing microwave device performance in simulation software, test instrumentation and component datasheets.

    Experiment 7 – Attenuation Measurement

    Overview

    Attenuation is reduction in signal power as it passes through a component or transmission medium, expressed in decibels:

    Attenuation (dB) = 10 log10 (P_input / P_output)

    Fixed attenuators introduce a constant, specified loss. Variable attenuators allow attenuation to be adjusted by changing position of a resistive vane inside the waveguide. Since electric field is maximum at center of guide in TE10 mode, maximum absorption occurs when vane is centered, and attenuation decreases as vane moves toward the side wall.

    Experiment Objectives

    • Measure insertion loss of a fixed attenuator
    • Characterize attenuation of a variable attenuator as a function of vane position
    • Understand role of attenuators in signal level management and instrument protection

    Lab Setup

    Signal power levels are measured at detectors with and without attenuator in the waveguide path. The difference in decibels gives insertion loss. For variable attenuators, measurement is repeated at multiple vane positions to generate an attenuation versus position curve.

    Industry Relevance

    Attenuators are used throughout RF laboratories and production test environments to protect sensitive receivers from overload, establish calibrated signal levels and simulate transmission path losses. In automated RF test systems, programmable step attenuators characterize receiver dynamic range and measure minimum detectable signal thresholds.

    Experiment 8 – Impedance Measurement Using Smith Chart

    Overview

    Impedance mismatch between source and load causes signal reflection and reduced power transfer. Smith Chart is a normalized circular graph that represents complex impedance values graphically, enabling reflection coefficient calculations, impedance transformations and matching network designs without complex algebraic computation.

    The chart maps all possible passive impedance values onto a bounded circular region, with the center representing system characteristic impedance. Points on the outer circumference of the chart represent purely reactive impedances.

    Experiment Objectives

    • Measure VSWR and voltage minimum position for an unknown load
    • Calculate reflection coefficient magnitude and phase from measurements
    • Plot normalized impedance on Smith Chart to determine resistance and reactance

    Lab Setup

    An unknown load is connected to the waveguide bench. The slotted line measures VSWR and distance between load and nearest voltage minimum. Using Smith Chart construction procedure, normalized load impedance is determined from these two measured values.

    Industry Relevance

    Smith Chart analysis is a standard tool for antenna engineers, RF circuit designers, and system integration engineers. Input impedance matching for low noise amplifiers, filter design, transmission line stub calculations and antenna feed network design all rely on Smith Chart methods. Modern simulation platforms, including ADS and CST, incorporate Smith Chart displays, and the physical intuition developed through this experiment helps students use these tools effectively .

    Experiment 9 – Circulator Characteristics

    Overview

    A circulator is a three port ferrite based microwave device with directional signal routing. A signal entering port 1 exits at port 2. A signal entering port 2 exits at port 3. A signal entering port 3 exits at port 1. Signals are strongly attenuated in reverse direction at each port.

    This non reciprocal behavior results from interaction between the microwave field and a magnetized ferrite material inside the device. Ferrite exhibits different propagation constants for left hand and right hand circularly polarized waves, producing asymmetric transmission.

    Key Parameters

    • Insertion Loss – Attenuation in forward direction
    • Isolation – Attenuation in reverse direction at each port

    Lab Setup

    The circulator is connected into a waveguide bench between source, a matched termination, and detector. Measurements are taken for each port combination to verify forward insertion loss and reverse isolation values.

    Industry Relevance

    Circulators are essential in radar systems that use a single antenna for both transmission and reception. The circulator routes high power transmitted pulse to antenna and directs low level received echo to receiver, while protecting sensitive receiver front end from transmitter output. Circulators are also used in satellite ground stations, microwave repeaters, and reflectometer test circuits.

    Experiment 10 – Antenna Radiation Pattern Measurement

    Overview

    The radiation pattern of an antenna describes spatial distribution of radiated power as a function of direction. Measurements are taken in two principal planes, E-plane containing electric field vector and direction of maximum radiation and H-plane containing magnetic field vector and direction of maximum radiation.

    Directional antennas such as horn antennas concentrate energy in a narrow beam, producing high gain in the main lobe direction. Half power beam width and side lobe level are primary parameters extracted from the radiation pattern.

    Experiment Objectives

    • Measure E-plane and H-plane radiation patterns of a horn antenna
    • Determine half power beam width and first null beam width
    • Compare measured pattern characteristics with standard horn antenna theory

    Lab Setup

    A transmitting horn antenna is connected to a microwave signal source. A receiving horn antenna is mounted on a rotating platform and positioned at the correct separation distance for far field measurement. The receiving antenna is rotated in fixed angular increments, and received signal power is recorded at each position, resulting data is plotted as a polar or Cartesian radiation pattern.

    Industry Relevance

    Antenna radiation pattern measurement is a mandatory step in design, production, and commissioning of every antenna system from cellular base station sector antennas to satellite dish feeds and radar arrays. Beam width and side lobe levels determine coverage area, interference rejection, and pointing accuracy. Engineers in wireless network planning, satellite engineering, and radar development perform these measurements as standard practice.

    Experiment 11 – PIN Diode Modulator Characteristics

    Overview

    A PIN diode consists of a p-type layer, a wide intrinsic layer, and an n-type layer. At microwave frequencies, the intrinsic region acts as a variable resistor controlled by forward DC bias current. High bias current reduces resistance, allowing microwave signals to pass. Low bias blocks signal. This behavior makes the PIN diode an effective high speed microwave switch and amplitude modulator.

    Experiment Objectives

    • Study modulation of a microwave carrier signal using a PIN diode modulator
    • Observe relationship between modulation input waveform and modulated microwave output
    • Measure ON/OFF power ratio

    Lab Setup

    The PIN modulator is placed in the waveguide bench between Gunn oscillator and measurement section. Square wave pulses from Gunn power supply’s built in generator are applied to PIN modulator bias input. Modulated output is observed on an oscilloscope or measured with a VSWR meter.

    Industry Relevance

    PIN diode switches and phase shifters are fundamental building blocks in phased array antennas for 5G infrastructure, military radar, and electronic warfare systems. In a phased array, large numbers of PIN diode phase shifters operate in coordination to electronically steer the antenna beam without mechanical movement, enabling rapid beam scanning at microsecond timescales. The switching and modulation principles studied in this experiment form the conceptual foundation for that entire class of electronically steerable systems.

    Essential Microwave Lab Equipment Reference

    A clear understanding of each instrument and component on the bench is necessary before beginning any microwave experiment.

    Gunn Power Supply – Provides regulated DC bias voltage for Gunn oscillator and includes a built in square wave generator for PIN modulation experiments. Voltage and current limits must be strictly observed.

    VSWR Meter – A narrowband tuned amplifier and detector calibrated to display signal levels in VSWR units or decibels. input frequency range must be correctly set for accurate readings.

    Slotted Waveguide Section – A waveguide section with a longitudinal slot along a broad wall, allowing a movable probe to sample internal electric field without significantly disturbing propagating signal. Used for standing wave analysis and VSWR measurement.

    Frequency Meter (Cavity Wavemeter) – A precision resonant cavity coupled to waveguide. At resonance with signal frequency, it produces a power absorption dip on the VSWR meter. Frequency is read from a calibrated micrometer scale using the provided calibration chart.

    Isolator – A two port ferrite device transmitting power in one direction only. Placed immediately after the signal source to prevent reflected power from pulling oscillator frequency.

    Variable Attenuator – A waveguide component with an adjustable resistive vane used to set signal levels, protect instruments from overload, and perform insertion loss measurements.

    Matched Termination – A waveguide termination that absorbs incident microwave power completely with no reflections. Used to terminate unused ports during measurements.

    Best Practices for Microwave Lab Experiments

    Identify signal path before energizing bench. Tracing each component from source to detector before switching on reduces setup errors and aids interpretation of results.

    Allow adequate warm up time. Microwave sources and VSWR meters require a thermal stabilization period after power on. Early readings are affected by drift and are not reliable.

    Maintain waveguide flange alignment. Flanged connections between waveguide sections must be clean and flush. Gaps or contamination at flanges introduce reflections that corrupt measurements.

    Record data in a structured table during the experiment. Attempting to reconstruct readings from memory after a session is unreliable and introduces error.

    Operate Gunn diodes within rated limits. The cooling fan must be running before bias voltage is applied. The diode reaches damaging temperatures rapidly at excessive bias without adequate cooling.

    Follow the klystron power in sequence. For klystron setups, heater supply must be applied and allowed to stabilize before beam voltage is engaged. High tension (HT) switch is operated last. This sequence is documented in the lab manual and must not be bypassed.

    Industry Applications of Microwave Lab Experiments

    Measurement techniques and component knowledge developed in microwave labs correspond directly to professional engineering tasks across multiple industries.

    Mobile and Wireless Communication – 4G LTE and 5G networks operate in microwave frequency bands. VSWR verification, antenna radiation pattern characterization and power level calibration are standard commissioning tasks for base station installations.

    Radar Engineering – Weather radar, air traffic control systems, maritime navigation radar, and defense surveillance platforms are built on waveguide technology, circulators, directional couplers and precision impedance matching. Lab familiarity with these components provides direct preparation for radar system work.

    Satellite Communication – Ground station antenna feeds, waveguide runs, low-noise amplifier input matching networks and uplink power chains all require measurement skills developed in microwave lab experiments. VSWR, gain and impedance characterization are routine tasks for satellite terminal engineers.

    Defense and Aerospace Electronics – Electronic warfare receivers, phased array radar systems, and airborne communication equipment rely extensively on microwave components and measurement techniques covered in these experiments.

    Medical Technology – Microwave ablation systems for tumor treatment and microwave based diagnostic imaging require precise power delivery under controlled impedance conditions, applying the same measurement principles practiced in the lab.

    Conclusion

    Microwave laboratory experiments are far more than just academic activities. They provide ECE students an understanding of practical communication and RF system operations in areas such as 5G, radar, satellite communication, aerospace and defence. Through these experiments students gain valuable hands-on experience in measuring a signal, impedance matching, testing an antenna and analyzing a microwave component.

    Experiments range from the study of Gunn diodes and klystrons, through to the measurement of VSWR, radiation patterns and S-parameters, providing a good base for microwave engineering. Such skills are of great importance in RF engineering, wireless communications, embedded systems and other advanced electronics industries. Knowing the concepts of a microwave laboratory not only enhances the technical knowledge of the students but also equips them to face the engineering challenges in the real world.

    Microwave lab experiments provide ECE students with hands-on experience in generating, transmitting, and measuring microwave signals using standard waveguide hardware. They bridge theoretical content of electromagnetic field theory and microwave engineering courses with practical measurement skills required in radar, satellite communication, 5G infrastructure, and RF circuit design roles.

    VSWR quantifies impedance mismatch in a transmission system. A VSWR of 1 indicates perfect impedance matching with no signal reflection. Higher values indicate increasing reflected power and degraded transmission efficiency. VSWR measurement is one of most fundamental diagnostic tools in RF engineering, performed routinely during installation and commissioning of antenna systems, waveguide assemblies, and RF circuits.

     A Gunn diode is a solid-state GaAs device that generates microwave oscillations through negative resistance behavior. It operates at low DC voltages and is widely used in modern systems. A reflex klystron is a vacuum tube device that generates microwave signals through velocity modulation of an electron beam. It operates at higher voltages and finds applications where higher output power is needed. Both represent distinct physical approaches to microwave signal generation and are studied in the lab to develop familiarity with each type.

    Magic Tee is a four-port waveguide junction functioning as a 3 dB power divider and 180 degree hybrid. Its E-arm and H-arm ports are mutually isolated, while two collinear ports receive equal power with either in-phase or 180-degree phase difference depending on the excited port. It is used in radar duplexers, microwave balanced mixers, and bridge measurement circuits.

    microwave engineering labs, including those available through India’s Ministry of Education Virtual Labs initiative, allow students to simulate standard experiments including VSWR measurement, Gunn diode characterization, and waveguide parameter verification. These platforms support conceptual preparation and procedure review. Physical lab experience managing actual connections, reading instruments under real conditions, and diagnosing measurement errors develops practical skills that virtual simulations do not fully replicate.

     The cooling fan must be operational before the Gunn diode is biased, and bias voltage must not exceed rated value. Waveguide flange connections require careful handling to prevent surface damage. For klystron setups, the correct power-on sequence must be followed as specified in the lab manual. Direct exposure to high-power microwave radiation must be avoided. Any equipment damage or abnormal operating condition must be reported to the lab instructor immediately.

    Tags: microwave experiments, microwave lab experiments

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