Thanks for repies Jiripolivka and biff44
Re: Coaxial waveguides. These can look like a (usually short) version of a coaxial cable structure, but are very different in operation.
The difference is that in a coaxial (cable-type) structure, the centre part is not connected to the outside, but is directly driven with alternating voltages. The electric field is
radial everywhere, and has magnetic components at right angles to the electric field, which makes them circular. The energy propagates at right angles to both, down the cable in a special mode TEM. If it reaches the end without finding a termination, it will return, messing up the fields travelling the other way into standing wave patterns.
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A
coaxial waveguide is like a regular circular waveguide with a conducting bit up the middle
which is at the same potential as the outer, ie. "grounded". The next picture shows a proper TE11 and a TE21 mode field pattern. If a launcher probe was inserted at (say) the top side, it would generate a local field similar to a piece of the radial-type TEM sort. The way to "force" a proper TE11 wave is to use four probes, with those diametrically opposite each other being fed 180° out of phase. This is common in feed schemes where there is enough frequency separation that the small waveguide can be placed up the middle of the large lower frequency waveguide in some multi-band feeds.
The problem is how to get a short probe or launcher to work in the gap space, hence the original question. There are a variety of schemes, including taper fins, and stepped fins, and the stepped transformer from 1973 shown in the next picture. If the horizontal lengths of the steps are anything near quarter-wave, the whole business will get very long at the lower microwave frequencies. Trying to get this type of launcher to work in the gap was not exactly showered with success!
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Biff44's suggestion of feeding a ridge wavguide is interesting, possibly similar to the taper-fin and stepped fin types I have seen. Given that in the usual way, by the time I post a question, I have already heavily trawled for answers, we do not expect any easy answers unless someone gets lucky. Launching a modest bandwidth with nominally OK return loss into this space is not easy!