Missile-borne active phased array antennas have been widely used in missile guidance for their beam agility, multifunctionality, and strong anti-interference capabilities. However, due to space constraints on the platform and difficulty in heat dissipation, the thermal power consumption of the antenna array can easily lead to excessive temperature, causing two primary issues: first, temperature-induced drift in T/R components, resulting in amplitude and phase errors in the feed current; second, temperature-dependent ripple voltage in the array’s secondary power supply, which exacerbates feed errors. Both issues degrade the electromagnetic performance of the array antenna. To mitigate these effects, this paper investigates feed errors and compensation methods in high-temperature environments. First, a synchronous Buck circuit ripple coefficient model is developed, and an electromagnetic–temperature coupling model is established, incorporating temperature-dependent feed current characteristics, and the law of electromagnetic performance changes is analyzed. On this basis, an electromagnetic performance compensation method based on a genetic algorithm is proposed to optimize the quantization compensation amount of the amplitude and phase of each element under the effect of high temperature.
Wang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.