Patents by Inventor Thomas McEwan

Thomas McEwan has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Publication number: 20070210955
    Abstract: A feedback loop corrects timing errors by reducing deviations from a constant radar sweep rate. Errors are detected and fed back to a phase corrector in a high gain feedback system. A precision radar rangefinder can be implemented with a direct digital synthesizer (DDS) that includes feedback error correction for reducing range errors by, for example, 100 times, or to 0.1 mm. An error-corrected DDS swept timing system can enable a new generation of highly flexible, repeatable and accurate radar, laser and guided wave rangefinders.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 10, 2006
    Publication date: September 13, 2007
    Inventor: Thomas McEwan
  • Publication number: 20070200749
    Abstract: Guided wave radar (GWR) pulses are launched onto an electromagnetic guide wire using a compact launcher that includes an impedance matching element. The impedance matching element produces reflections that cancel launcher reflections. Short range echoes can be accurately detected after impedance matching. GWR operation in small tanks and in tanks containing low dielectric constant materials, such as propane, can be enhanced with the compact impedance-matched launcher.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 24, 2006
    Publication date: August 30, 2007
    Inventor: Thomas McEwan
  • Publication number: 20070192391
    Abstract: A direct digital synthesizer (DDS) drives a receive sampling gate at a frequency that is offset from a transmit pulse frequency to produce an expanded time sampled echo signal. The frequency offset generates a smoothly slipping phase between realtime received echoes and the sampling gate that stroboscopically expands the apparent time of the sampled echoes with an exemplary factor of 1-million and a range accuracy of 1-centimeter. The flexibility and repeatability of the digitally synthesized timing system is a quantum leap over analog prior art. The rock solid stability of the DDS allows further accuracy improvement via an error correction table.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 10, 2006
    Publication date: August 16, 2007
    Inventor: Thomas McEwan
  • Publication number: 20070177704
    Abstract: A rate locked loop (RLL) regulates phase slip between two clock signals to provide precision timing for radar, TDR and laser ranging systems. Two clocks having a small mutual frequency offset exhibit a slowing changing relative phase, or phase slip, that produces a stroboscopic time expansion effect in a ranging system. A phase detector converts clock phase to voltage and the voltage is differentiated to provide a rate-of-change signal to a loop controller that precisely regulates the rate-of-phase change. The RLL controls a VCO to produce a constant, linear phase slip having phase errors below the time equivalent of 1-picosecond.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 30, 2006
    Publication date: August 2, 2007
    Inventor: Thomas McEwan
  • Publication number: 20050164643
    Abstract: Transistor package leads form quarter-wave antenna elements that directly radiate RF energy into free space without the need for a separate antenna. The transistor operates at a fundamental frequency and radiates a harmonic, thereby allowing radiation at frequencies normally considered “beyond cutoff” for a packaged transistor. This technique enables an additional 20 GHz of spectrum for use by surface mount technology. The transistor may be mounted on 1.6 mm thick glass-epoxy circuit board that also forms a quarter-wave reflector at 26 GHz. An optional dielectric lens produces a narrow beam and an optional planar filter rejects spurious fundamental emissions. A 26 GHz ultra-wideband (UWB) pulse-echo radar rangefinder implementation provides a low-cost upgrade to ultrasound.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 22, 2004
    Publication date: July 28, 2005
    Inventor: Thomas McEwan