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{{short description|Object detection system using radio waves}} | |||
{{Otheruses}} | |||
{{Other uses}} | |||
{{Use Canadian English|date=August 2016}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2023}} | |||
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| image1 = Radar antenna.jpg | |||
| alt1 = A long-range radar ], known as ''ALTAIR'', used to detect and track space objects in conjunction with ] testing at the ] on ].<!--Original text, please keep it simple in the lead--> | |||
| caption1 = Long-range radar ], used to track space objects and ballistic missiles | |||
| image2 = Radar-hatzerim-1-1.jpg | |||
| alt2 = Israeli military radar is typical of the type of radar used for ]. The antenna rotates at a steady rate, sweeping the local airspace with a narrow vertical fan-shaped beam, to detect aircraft at all altitudes.<!--Original text--> | |||
| caption2 = Radar of the type used for detection of aircraft. It rotates steadily, sweeping the airspace with a narrow beam. | |||
}} | |||
'''Radar''' is a system that uses ]s to determine the distance ('']''), ] (] and ]s), and ] of objects relative to the site. It is a ] method<ref name="ITU-2020">{{cite book | title=Radio Regulations |chapter=Chapter I – Terminology and technical characteristics | date=2020 |author=ITU |publisher=International Telecommunications Union (ITU) | url=https://www.itu.int/pub/R-REG-RR-2020 |chapter-url=https://search.itu.int/history/HistoryDigitalCollectionDocLibrary/1.44.48.en.101.pdf | access-date=2024-03-24}}</ref> used to detect and track ], ], ], ], ]s, map ], and ]. | |||
], known as ''ALTAIR'', used to detect and track space objects in conjunction with ] testing at the ] on the ] ].]] | |||
] C-band, polarimetric, weather radar during construction]] | |||
A radar system consists of a ] producing ]s in the ] or ]s domain, a transmitting ], a receiving antenna (often the same antenna is used for transmitting and receiving) and a ] and ] to determine properties of the objects. Radio waves (pulsed or continuous) from the transmitter reflect off the objects and return to the receiver, giving information about the objects' locations and speeds. | |||
'''Radar''' is an object detection system that uses ] waves to identify the range, altitude, direction, or speed of both moving and fixed objects such as ], ships, motor vehicles, weather formations, and terrain. The term ''RADAR'' was coined in 1940 by the U.S. Navy as an ] for '''''RA'''dio '''D'''etection '''A'''nd '''R'''anging''.<ref>{{cite web | |||
| url = http://www.nasaexplores.com/show_k4_teacher_st.php?id=030703122033 | |||
| author = NASA |authorlink= National Aeronautics and Space Administration | |||
| title = RADAR means: Radio Detection and Ranging | |||
| work = Nasa Explores | |||
| archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20071014061010/http://nasaexplores.com/show_k4_teacher_st.php?id=030703122033 | |||
| archivedate= 2007-10-14 | |||
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | |||
|url=http://www.answers.com/topic/radar | |||
|title= Radar definition in multiple dictionnaries | |||
|publisher=Answers.com | |||
| date= | |||
|accessdate=2008-10-09}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | |||
|url=http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/radar | |||
|title= Radar definition | |||
|publisher=Merriam Webster Dictionnary | |||
| date= 2008 | |||
|accessdate=2008-10-09}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | |||
|url=http://www.webster-dictionary.org/definition/radar | |||
|title= Radar definition | |||
|publisher=Webster Dictionnary | |||
|accessdate=2008-10-09}}</ref> The term has since entered the English language as a standard word, ''radar'', losing the capitalization. Radar was originally called '''RDF''' (]) in the United Kingdom, using the same acronym as ] to preserve the secrecy of its ranging capability<ref>Bowen, E. G., ''Radar Days'', Institute of Physics Publishing, Bristol, 1987, ISBN 0-7503-0586-X</ref>. | |||
Radar was developed secretly for ] use by several countries in the period before and during ]. A key development was the ] in the ], which allowed the creation of relatively small systems with sub-meter resolution. The term ''RADAR'' was coined in 1940 by the ] as an ] for "radio detection and ranging".<!--See ]--><ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.btb.termiumplus.gc.ca/tpv2alpha/alpha-fra.html?lang=fra&i=1&index=ent&__index=ent&srchtxt=radar&comencsrch.x=0&comencsrch.y=0 | title = Radar definition | publisher = Public Works and Government Services Canada | author = Translation Bureau | year = 2013 | access-date = 8 November 2013 | archive-date = 4 January 2014 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140104204420/http://www.btb.termiumplus.gc.ca/tpv2alpha/alpha-fra.html?lang=fra&i=1&index=ent&__index=ent&srchtxt=radar&comencsrch.x=0&comencsrch.y=0 | url-status = dead }}</ref><ref>McGraw-Hill dictionary of scientific and technical terms / Daniel N. Lapedes, editor in chief. Lapedes, Daniel N. New York; Montreal : McGraw-Hill, 1976. , 1634, A26 p.</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Radio Detection and Ranging |date=2 October 1943 |journal=Nature |volume=152 |issue= 3857|pages= 391–392|doi=10.1038/152391b0 |bibcode=1943Natur.152..391. |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://rscc.umn.edu/lessons/datatypes/radar |title=Remote Sensing Core Curriculum: Radio Detection and Ranging (RADAR) |author=<!--Not stated--> |date=<!--Not stated--> |website=University of Minnesota |access-date=31 May 2021 |archive-date=2 June 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210602214933/https://rscc.umn.edu/lessons/datatypes/radar |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last1=Duda|first1=Jeffrey D.|title=History of Radar Meteorology|url=https://meteor.geol.iastate.edu/~jdduda/portfolio/571_write_up.pdf|access-date=2 March 2023|quote=Note: the word ''radar'' is actually an acronym that stands for RAdio Detection and Ranging. It was officially coined by U.S. Navy Lieutenant Commanders Samuel M. Tucker and F.R. Furth in November 1940|archive-date=2 March 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230302094641/https://meteor.geol.iastate.edu/~jdduda/portfolio/571_write_up.pdf|url-status=bot: unknown}}</ref> The term ''radar'' has since entered English and other languages as an ], a common noun, ]. | |||
A radar system has a transmitter that emits ]. When they come into contact with an object they are ] in all directions. The signal is thus partly reflected back and it has a slight change of wavelength (and thus frequency) if the target is moving. The receiver is usually, but not always, in the same location as the transmitter. Although the signal returned is usually very weak, the signal can be amplified through use of electronic techniques in the receiver and in the antenna configuration. This enables radar to detect objects at ranges where other emissions, such as ] or ], would be too weak to detect. Radar uses include ] detection of ], ], ], ] detection of ] ], determining the speed of baseballs and by the military. | |||
The modern uses of radar are highly diverse, including air and terrestrial traffic control, ], ], ], ]s to locate landmarks and other ships, aircraft anti-collision systems, ] systems, outer ] and ] systems, ] ] monitoring, ], altimetry and ]s, ] target locating systems, ]s, and ] for geological observations. Modern high tech radar systems use ] and ] and are capable of extracting useful information from very high ] levels. | |||
==History== | |||
Other systems which are similar to radar make use of other parts of the ]. One example is ], which uses predominantly ] from ]s rather than radio waves. With the emergence of driverless vehicles, radar is expected to assist the automated platform to monitor its environment, thus preventing unwanted incidents.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Fakhrul Razi Ahmad |first=Zakuan |title=Performance Assessment of an Integrated Radar Architecture for Multi-Types Frontal Object Detection for Autonomous Vehicle |journal=2018 IEEE International Conference on Automatic Control and Intelligent Systems (I2CACIS) |date=2018 |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/330245995 |display-authors=etal |access-date=9 January 2019 |archive-date=28 July 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200728115405/https://www.researchgate.net/publication/330245995_Performance_Assessment_of_an_Integrated_Radar_Architecture_for_Multi-Types_Frontal_Object_Detection_for_Autonomous_Vehicle |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
== History == | |||
{{Main|History of radar}} | {{Main|History of radar}} | ||
=== First experiments === | |||
Several ]s, scientists, and ]s contributed to the ]. The first to use radio waves to detect "the presence of distant metallic objects" was Christian Hülsmeyer, who in 1904 demonstrated the feasibility of detecting the presence of a ship in dense fog, but not its distance.<ref name=RadarWorld></ref><ref>(German) </ref> He received Reichspatent Nr. 165546<ref></ref> for his pre-radar device in April 1904, and later patent 169154<ref></ref> for a related amendment for ranging. He also received a patent<ref>{{patent|GB|13170|''Telemobiloscope''}}</ref> in England for his ''telemobiloscope'' on September 23, 1904.<ref name="RadarWorld"/><ref>(German) </ref> | |||
As early as 1886, German physicist ] showed that radio waves could be reflected from solid objects. In 1895, ], a physics instructor at the ] school in ], developed an apparatus using a ] tube for detecting distant lightning strikes. The next year, he added a ]. In 1897, while testing this equipment for communicating between two ships in the ], he took note of an ] caused by the passage of a third vessel. In his report, Popov wrote that this phenomenon might be used for detecting objects, but he did nothing more with this observation.<ref>Kostenko, A.A., A.I. Nosich, and I.A. Tishchenko, "Radar Prehistory, Soviet Side," ''Proc. of IEEE APS International Symposium 2001,'' vol. 4. p. 44, 2003</ref> | |||
The German inventor ] was the first to use radio waves to detect "the presence of distant metallic objects". In 1904, he demonstrated the feasibility of detecting a ship in dense fog, but not its distance from the transmitter.<ref name="radarworld.org">{{cite web|url=http://www.radarworld.org/huelsmeyer.html|title=Christian Huelsmeyer, the inventor|work=radarworld.org|access-date=18 February 2007|archive-date=27 December 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171227233002/http://www.radarworld.org/huelsmeyer.html|url-status=live}}</ref> He obtained a patent<ref></ref> for his detection device in April 1904 and later a patent<ref></ref> for a related amendment for estimating the distance to the ship. He also obtained a British patent on 23 September 1904<ref>{{patent|GB|13170|''Telemobiloscope''}} {{Dead link|date=June 2020}}</ref> for a full radar system, that he called a ''telemobiloscope''. It operated on a 50 cm wavelength and the pulsed radar signal was created via a spark-gap. His system already used the classic antenna setup of horn antenna with parabolic reflector and was presented to German military officials in practical tests in ] and ] harbour but was rejected.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://100-jahre-radar.fraunhofer.de/img/gdr_zeichnungpatent.jpg |title=gdr_zeichnungpatent.jpg |access-date=24 February 2015 |archive-date=24 February 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150224135053/http://100-jahre-radar.fraunhofer.de/img/gdr_zeichnungpatent.jpg |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
In August 1917 ] first established principles regarding frequency and power level for the first primitive radar units.<ref>], 1917</ref> He stated, " ''by their'' ''use we may produce at will, from a sending station, an electrical effect in any particular region of the globe; '''' we may determine the relative position or course of a moving object, such as a vessel at sea, the distance traversed by the same, or its speed''." | |||
In 1915, ] used radio technology to provide advance warning of thunderstorms to airmen<ref>{{cite news|title=Making waves: Robert Watson-Watt, the pioneer of radar|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-tayside-central-27393558|publisher=BBC|date=16 February 2017|access-date=20 July 2018|archive-date=28 February 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170228025758/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-tayside-central-27393558|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Robert Wattson-Watt |url=https://lemelson.mit.edu/resources/robert-wattson-watt |website=The Lemelson-MIT Program |access-date=1 December 2023}}</ref> and during the 1920s went on to lead the U.K. research establishment to make many advances using radio techniques, including the probing of the ] and the detection of ] at long distances. Through his lightning experiments, Watson-Watt became an expert on the use of ] before turning his inquiry to ] transmission. Requiring a suitable receiver for such studies, he told the "new boy" ] to conduct an extensive review of available shortwave units. Wilkins would select a ] model after noting its manual's description of a "fading" effect (the common term for interference at the time) when aircraft flew overhead. | |||
Before the ] developments by the British, the Germans, the French, the Soviets and the Americans led to the modern version of radar. In 1934 the French ] stated he was building a radar system "conceived according to the principles stated by Tesla" and obtained a patent (French Patent n° 788795 in 1934) for a working dual radar system, a part of which was installed on the ] liner in 1935.<ref></ref><ref>{{patent|FR|788795|''Nouveau système de repérage d'obstacles et ses applications''}}</ref><ref name="radarnet">{{fr icon}} on www.radar-france.fr</ref> The same year, American Dr. ] tested the first ]<ref>{{cite web | |||
| last=Goebel | |||
| first=Greg | |||
| title=The Wizard War: WW2 & The Origins Of Radar, Chapter 1: The British Invention of Radar | |||
| url=http://www.vectorsite.net/ttwiz_01.html | |||
| date=2007-01-01 | |||
| accessdate=2007-03-24 | |||
}}</ref> and the Soviet military engineer P.K.Oschepkov, in collaboration with ], produced an experimental apparatus RAPID capable of detecting an aircraft within 3 km of a receiver.<ref>John Erickson. Radio-Location and the Air Defence Problem: The Design and Development of Soviet Radar. Science Studies, Vol. 2, No. 3 (Jul., 1972), pp. 241-263</ref> Hungarian ] produced a working model by 1936 at the ] laboratory in the same vein. | |||
By placing a transmitter and receiver on opposite sides of the ] in 1922, U.S. Navy researchers ] and ] discovered that ships passing through the beam path caused the received signal to fade in and out. Taylor submitted a report, suggesting that this phenomenon might be used to detect the presence of ships in low visibility, but the Navy did not immediately continue the work. Eight years later, ] at the ] (NRL) observed similar fading effects from passing aircraft; this revelation led to a patent application<ref>Hyland, L.A, A.H. Taylor, and L.C. Young; "System for detecting objects by radio," U.S. Patent No. 1981884, granted 27 November 1934</ref> as well as a proposal for further intensive research on radio-echo signals from moving targets to take place at NRL, where Taylor and Young were based at the time.<ref>{{cite book|last=Howeth|first=Linwood S.|chapter=Ch. XXXVIII Radar|title=History of Communications-Electronics in the United States Navy|date=1963|publisher=Washington|chapter-url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112064674325;view=1up;seq=475}}</ref> | |||
However, it was the British who were the first to fully exploit it as a defence against aircraft attack. This was spurred on by fears that the Germans were developing ]s. Following a study of the possibility of propagating electromagnetic energy and the likely effect, the British scientists asked by the ] to investigate, concluded that a death ray was impractical but detection of aircraft appeared feasible.<ref>http://www.doramusic.com/Radar.htm</ref> ] demonstrated to his superiors the capabilities of a working prototype and patented the device in 1935 (British Patent GB593017)<ref name="radarnet"/><ref> official site of the ''Patent Office''</ref><ref>{{patent|GB|593017|''Improvements in or relating to wireless systems''}}</ref> It served as the basis for the ] network of radars to defend ]. | |||
The war precipitated research to find better resolution, more portability and more features for radar. The post-war years have seen the use of radar in fields as diverse as ], weather monitoring, ] and road speed control. | |||
Similarly, in the UK, L. S. Alder took out a secret provisional patent for Naval radar in 1928.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Coales |first1=J.F. |title=The Origins and Development of Radar in the Royal Navy, 1935–45 with Particular Reference to Decimetric Gunnery Equipments |date=1995 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-1-349-13457-1 |pages=5–66}}</ref> ] and P. E. Pollard developed a ] test unit, operating at 50 cm (600 MHz) and using pulsed modulation which gave successful laboratory results. In January 1931, a writeup on the apparatus was entered in the ''Inventions Book'' maintained by the Royal Engineers. This is the first official record in Great Britain of the technology that was used in coastal defence and was incorporated into ] as ].<ref>Butement, W. A. S., and P. E. Pollard; "Coastal Defence Apparatus", ''Inventions Book of the Royal Engineers Board'', Jan. 1931</ref><ref>Swords, S. S.; ''tech. History of the Beginnings of Radar'', Peter Peregrinus, Ltd, 1986, pp. 71–74</ref> | |||
==Applications of Radar== | |||
===Before World War II=== | |||
The information provided by radar includes the bearing and range (and therefore position) of the object from the radar scanner. It is thus used in many different fields where the need for such positioning is crucial. The first use of radar was for military purposes; to locate air, ground and sea targets. This has evolved in the civilian field into applications for aircraft, ships and roads. | |||
], Anacostia, D. C., from the late 1930s (photo taken in 1945)]] | |||
Before the ], researchers in the United Kingdom, ], ], ], ], the ],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.museumwaalsdorp.nl/en/museum-waalsdorp-2/airacous/air-acoustics-electric-listening-device/ |title=The "Electric listening device" (1936 – 1941) |website=museumwaalsdorp.nl |access-date=2024-11-10}}</ref> the ], and the United States, independently and in great secrecy, developed technologies that led to the modern version of radar. Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and South Africa followed prewar Great Britain's radar development, ] and Sweden generated its radar technology during the war.{{citation needed|date=September 2024}} | |||
In France in 1934, following systematic studies on the ], the research branch of the ] (CSF) headed by Maurice Ponte with Henri Gutton, Sylvain Berline and M. Hugon, began developing an obstacle-locating radio apparatus, aspects of which were installed on the ocean liner ] in 1935.<ref>{{cite magazine|title= Radio Waves Warn Liner of Obstacles in Path|magazine= Popular Mechanics|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=x98DAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA844|date= December 1935|publisher= Hearst Magazines|page= 844|access-date= 11 February 2021|archive-date= 7 October 2024|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20241007062109/https://books.google.com/books?id=x98DAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA844#v=onepage&q&f=false|url-status= live}}</ref><ref>Frederick Seitz, Norman G. Einspruch, Electronic Genie: The Tangled History of Silicon – 1998 – page 104</ref> | |||
In ], aircraft are equipped with radar devices that warn of obstacles in or approaching their path and give accurate altitude readings. They can land in fog at airports equipped with radar-assisted ] (GCA) systems, in which the plane's flight is observed on radar screens while operators radio landing directions to the pilot. | |||
During the same period, Soviet military engineer ], in collaboration with the ], produced an experimental apparatus, RAPID, capable of detecting an aircraft within 3 km of a receiver.<ref>John Erickson. Radio-Location and the Air Defence Problem: The Design and Development of Soviet Radar. ''Science Studies'', vol. 2, no. 3 (Jul. 1972), pp. 241–263</ref> The Soviets produced their first mass production radars RUS-1 and RUS-2 Redut in 1939 but further development was slowed following the arrest of Oshchepkov and his subsequent ] sentence. In total, only 607 Redut stations were produced during the war. The first Russian airborne radar, ], entered into service in June 1943 on ] dive bombers. More than 230 Gneiss-2 stations were produced by the end of 1944.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://kret.com/en/news/3657/ | title=The history of radar, from aircraft radio detectors to airborne radar | work=kret.com | date=17 February 2015 | access-date=28 April 2015 | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150620161506/http://kret.com/en/news/3657/ | archive-date=20 June 2015 }}</ref> The French and Soviet systems, however, featured continuous-wave operation that did not provide the full performance ultimately synonymous with modern radar systems. | |||
]s are used to measure the bearing and distance of ships to prevent collision with other ships, to navigate and to fix their position at sea when within range of shore or other fixed references such as islands, buoys, and lightships. In port or in harbour, ] radar systems are used to monitor and regulate ship movements in busy waters. Police forces use ]s to monitor vehicle speeds on the roads. | |||
Full radar evolved as a pulsed system, and the first such elementary apparatus was demonstrated in December 1934 by the American ], working at the ].<ref>Page, Robert Morris, ''The Origin of Radar'', Doubleday Anchor, New York, 1962, p. 66</ref> The following year, the ] successfully tested a primitive surface-to-surface radar to aim ] ]s at night.<ref>{{cite magazine|title= Mystery Ray Locates 'Enemy'|magazine= Popular Science|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=bygDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA29|date= October 1935|publisher= Bonnier Corporation|page= 29|access-date= 11 February 2021|archive-date= 7 October 2024|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20241007062141/https://books.google.com/books?id=bygDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA29#v=onepage&q&f=false|url-status= live}}</ref> This design was followed by a pulsed system demonstrated in May 1935 by ] and the firm {{ill|Gesellschaft für elektroakustische und mechanische Apparate|lt=GEMA|de|GEMA (Radar)}} in Germany and then another in June 1935 by an ] team led by ] in Great Britain. | |||
Radar has invaded many other fields. ]s use radar to monitor ]. It has become the primary tool for short-term ] and to watch for ] such as ]s, ]es, ]s precipitation types, etc... ]s use specialised ]s to map the composition of the ]. The list is getting longer all the time. | |||
] and his team]] | |||
In 1935, Watson-Watt was asked to judge recent reports of a German radio-based ] and turned the request over to Wilkins. Wilkins returned a set of calculations demonstrating the system was basically impossible. When Watson-Watt then asked what such a system might do, Wilkins recalled the earlier report about aircraft causing radio interference. This revelation led to the ] of 26 February 1935, using a powerful ] shortwave transmitter as the source and their GPO receiver setup in a field while a bomber flew around the site. When the plane was clearly detected, ], the ], was very impressed with their system's potential and funds were immediately provided for further operational development.<ref name="Alan Dower Blumlein-2002">{{cite web|url=http://www.doramusic.com/Radar.htm |title=The story of RADAR Development |author=Alan Dower Blumlein |year=2002 |access-date=6 May 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110710144447/http://www.doramusic.com/Radar.htm |archive-date=10 July 2011 }}</ref> Watson-Watt's team patented the device in patent GB593017.<ref name="BREVET D'INVENTION-1934">{{cite web|language=fr|url=http://www.radar-france.fr/brevet%20radar1934.htm|title=Nouveau système de repérage d'obstacles et ses applications|trans-title=New obstacle detection system and its applications|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090116093441/http://www.radar-france.fr/brevet%20radar1934.htm|archive-date=16 January 2009|work=BREVET D'INVENTION|date=20 July 1934|via=radar-france.fr}}</ref><ref>{{cite press release|url=http://www.patent.gov.uk/media/pressrelease/2001/1009.htm|title=British man first to patent radar|date=10 September 2001|website=Media Centre|publisher=The Patent Office|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060719224405/http://www.patent.gov.uk/media/pressrelease/2001/1009.htm|archive-date=19 July 2006}}</ref><ref>{{patent|GB|593017|''Improvements in or relating to wireless systems''}}</ref> | |||
] tower in Great Baddow, Essex, United Kingdom]] | |||
]]] | |||
Development of radar greatly expanded on 1 September 1936, when Watson-Watt became superintendent of a new establishment under the British ], Bawdsey Research Station located in ], near Felixstowe, Suffolk. Work there resulted in the design and installation of aircraft detection and tracking stations called "]" along the East and South coasts of England in time for the outbreak of World War II in 1939. This system provided the vital advance information that helped the Royal Air Force win the ]; without it, significant numbers of fighter aircraft, which Great Britain did not have available, would always have needed to be in the air to respond quickly. The radar formed part of the "]" for collecting reports of enemy aircraft and coordinating the response. | |||
Given all required funding and development support, the team produced working radar systems in 1935 and began deployment. By 1936, the first five Chain Home (CH) systems were operational and by 1940 stretched across the entire UK including Northern Ireland. Even by standards of the era, CH was crude; instead of broadcasting and receiving from an aimed antenna, CH broadcast a signal floodlighting the entire area in front of it, and then used one of Watson-Watt's own radio direction finders to determine the direction of the returned echoes. This fact meant CH transmitters had to be much more powerful and have better antennas than competing systems but allowed its rapid introduction using existing technologies. | |||
===During World War II=== | |||
{{main|Radar in World War II}} | |||
] radar operators in England]] | |||
A key development was the ] in the UK, which allowed the creation of relatively small systems with sub-meter resolution. Britain shared the technology with the U.S. during the 1940 ].<ref name="Angela Hind-2007">{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/6331897.stm |title=Briefcase 'that changed the world' |publisher=BBC News |author=Angela Hind |date=5 February 2007 |access-date=16 August 2007 |quote=It not only changed the course of the war by allowing us to develop airborne radar systems, it remains the key piece of technology that lies at the heart of your microwave oven today. The cavity magnetron's invention changed the world. |archive-date=15 November 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071115140606/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/6331897.stm |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last1=Harford|first1=Tim|title=How the search for a 'death ray' led to radar|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-41188464|access-date=9 October 2017|work=BBC World Service|date=9 October 2017|quote=But by 1940, it was the British who had made a spectacular breakthrough: the resonant cavity magnetron, a radar transmitter far more powerful than its predecessors.... The magnetron stunned the Americans. Their research was years off the pace.|archive-date=9 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171009003404/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-41188464|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
In April 1940, '']'' showed an example of a radar unit using the Watson-Watt patent in an article on air defence.<ref>{{cite magazine|title= Night Watchmen of the Skies|magazine= Popular Science|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=hCcDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA56|date= December 1941|publisher= Bonnier Corporation|page= 56|access-date= 11 February 2021|archive-date= 7 October 2024|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20241007062141/https://books.google.com/books?id=hCcDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA56#v=onepage&q&f=false|url-status= live}}</ref> Also, in late 1941 '']'' had an article in which a U.S. scientist speculated about the British early warning system on the English east coast and came close to what it was and how it worked.<ref name="Popular Mechanics-1941">{{cite magazine|title=Odd-shaped Boats Rescue British Engineers|magazine= Popular Mechanics|url= https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_mtkDAAAAMBAJ/page/n67|date= September 1941|publisher= Hearst Magazines|page= 26}}</ref> Watson-Watt was sent to the U.S. in 1941 to advise on air defense after Japan's ].<ref>{{cite news|title=Scotland's little-known WWII hero who helped beat the Luftwaffe with invention of radar set to be immortalised in film|url=http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/real-life/scotlands-little-known-wwii-hero-who-3882904|newspaper=Daily Record|date=16 February 2017|access-date=16 February 2017|archive-date=17 February 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170217064126/http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/real-life/scotlands-little-known-wwii-hero-who-3882904|url-status=live}}</ref> ] organized the secret ] at ], Cambridge, Massachusetts which developed microwave radar technology in the years 1941–45. Later, in 1943, Page greatly improved radar with the ] that was used for many years in most radar applications.<ref>{{cite web | last=Goebel | first=Greg | title=The Wizard War: WW2 & The Origins of Radar | url=http://www.vectorsite.net/ttwiz_01.html | date=1 January 2007 | access-date=24 March 2007 | archive-date=29 August 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180829212225/http://www.vectorsite.net/ttwiz_01.html | url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
The war precipitated research to find better resolution, more portability, and more features for radar, including small, lightweight sets to equip ]s (]) and ] (]), and complementary navigation systems like ] used by the ]. | |||
==Applications== | |||
] | |||
The information provided by radar includes the bearing and range (and therefore position) of the object from the radar scanner. It is thus used in many different fields where the need for such positioning is crucial. The first use of radar was for military purposes: to locate air, ground and sea targets. This evolved in the civilian field into applications for aircraft, ships, and automobiles.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.portvision.com/news-events/press-releases-news/ais-vs-radar-vessel-tracking-optionsportvision|title=AIS vs Radar: Vessel Tracking Options|last=Kline|first=Aaron|website=portvision.com|access-date=1 February 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190202042639/https://www.portvision.com/news-events/press-releases-news/ais-vs-radar-vessel-tracking-optionsportvision|archive-date=2 February 2019|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=Quain|first=John|date=26 September 2019|title=These High-Tech Sensors May Be the Key to Autonomous Cars|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/26/business/autonomous-cars-sensors.html|access-date=5 June 2020|website=]|archive-date=5 June 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200605113248/https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/26/business/autonomous-cars-sensors.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
In ], aircraft can be equipped with radar devices that warn of aircraft or other obstacles in or approaching their path, display weather information, and give accurate altitude readings. The first commercial device fitted to aircraft was a 1938 Bell Lab unit on some ] aircraft.<ref name="Popular Mechanics-1941"/> Aircraft can land in fog at airports equipped with radar-assisted ] systems in which the plane's position is observed on ] screens by operators who thereby give radio landing instructions to the pilot, maintaining the aircraft on a defined approach path to the runway. Military fighter aircraft are usually fitted with air-to-air targeting radars, to detect and target enemy aircraft. In addition, larger specialized military aircraft carry powerful airborne radars to observe air traffic over a wide region and direct fighter aircraft towards targets.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.nato.int/nato_static/assets/pdf/pdf_publications/20120103_awacs-e.pdf|title="AWACS: Nato's eyes in the sky"|date=2007|website=NATO|access-date=26 March 2020|archive-date=4 October 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231004005409/https://www.nato.int/nato_static/assets/pdf/pdf_publications/20120103_awacs-e.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
]s are used to measure the bearing and distance of ships to prevent collision with other ships, to navigate, and to fix their position at sea when within range of shore or other fixed references such as islands, buoys, and lightships. In port or in harbour, ] radar systems are used to monitor and regulate ship movements in busy waters.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.terma.com/surveillance-mission-systems/radar-systems/vessel-traffic-services/|title=Terma|date=8 April 2019}}</ref> | |||
Meteorologists use radar to monitor ] and wind. It has become the primary tool for short-term ]ing and watching for ] such as ]s, ]es, ]s, precipitation types, etc. ]s use specialized ]s to map the composition of ]. Police forces use ]s to monitor vehicle speeds on the roads. Automotive radars are used for adaptive cruise control and emergency breaking on vehicles by ignoring stationary roadside objects that could cause incorrect brake application and instead measuring moving objects to prevent collision with other vehicles. As part of ], fixed-position stopped vehicle detection (SVD) radars are mounted on the roadside to detect stranded vehicles, obstructions and debris by inverting the automotive radar approach and ignoring moving objects.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Stopped Vehicle Detection (SVD) Comparison with Automotive Radar |url=https://ogierelectronics.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/svr-500-comparison-with-automotive-radar.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240609110752/https://ogierelectronics.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/svr-500-comparison-with-automotive-radar.pdf |archive-date=2024-06-09|website=Ogier Electronics |url-status=live}}</ref> Smaller radar systems are used to ]. Examples are breathing pattern detection for sleep monitoring<ref>{{cite web|url=https://sleep.mysplus.com/technology.html|title=The Technology Behind S+|website=Sleep.mysplus.com|access-date=29 October 2017|archive-date=27 August 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160827084238/https://sleep.mysplus.com/technology.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> and hand and finger ] for computer interaction.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://atap.google.com/soli/|title=Project Soli|website=Atap.google.com|access-date=29 October 2017|archive-date=2 February 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170202031805/https://atap.google.com/soli/|url-status=live}}</ref> Automatic door opening, light activation and intruder sensing are also common. | |||
==Principles== | ==Principles== | ||
===Radar signal=== | |||
The radar dish, or antenna, transmits pulses of radio waves or microwaves which bounce off any object in their path. The object returns a tiny part of the wave's energy to a dish or antenna which is usually located at the same site as the transmitter. The time it takes for the reflected waves to return to the dish enables a computer to calculate how far away the object is, its radial velocity and other characteristics. | |||
] of 13]] | |||
{{further|Radar signal characteristics}} | |||
A radar system has a ] that emits ]s known as ''radar signals'' in predetermined directions. When these signals contact an object they are usually ] or ] in many directions, although some of them will be absorbed and penetrate into the target. Radar signals are reflected especially well by materials of considerable ]—such as most metals, ], and wet ground. This makes the use of ]s possible in certain cases. The radar signals that are reflected back towards the radar receiver are the desirable ones that make radar detection work. If the object is ''moving'' either toward or away from the transmitter, there will be a slight change in the ] of the radio waves due to the ]. | |||
Radar receivers are usually, but not always, in the same location as the transmitter. The reflected radar signals captured by the receiving antenna are usually very weak. They can be strengthened by ]. More sophisticated methods of ] are also used in order to recover useful radar signals. | |||
===Reflection=== | |||
] image (of ]). The radar's frequency, pulse form, polarization, signal processing, and antenna determine what it can observe.]] | |||
The weak absorption of radio waves by the medium through which they pass is what enables radar sets to detect objects at relatively long ranges—ranges at which other electromagnetic wavelengths, such as ], ], and ], are too strongly attenuated. Weather phenomena, such as fog, clouds, rain, falling snow, and sleet, that block visible light are usually transparent to radio waves. Certain radio frequencies that are absorbed or scattered by water vapour, raindrops, or atmospheric gases (especially oxygen) are avoided when designing radars, except when their detection is intended. | |||
] waves reflect (scatter) from any large change in the ] or ] constants. This means that a solid object in ] or a ], or other significant change in atomic density between the object and what is surrounding it, will usually scatter radar (radio) waves. This is particularly true for ] materials, such as metal and carbon fiber, making radar particularly well suited to the detection of ] and ships. ], containing ] and sometimes ] substances, is used on military vehicles to reduce radar reflection. This is the radio equivalent of painting something a dark color so that it cannot be seen through normal means. | |||
=== Illumination === | |||
Radar waves scatter in a variety of ways depending on the size (wavelength) of the radio wave and the shape of the target. If the wavelength is much shorter than the target's size, the wave will bounce off in a way similar to the way light is reflected by a ]. If the wavelength is much longer than the size of the target, the target is ] (positive and negative charges are separated), like a ]. This is described by ], an effect that creates the Earth's blue sky and red ]s. When the two length scales are comparable, there may be ]s. Early radars used very long ]s that were larger than the targets and received a vague signal, whereas some modern systems use shorter ]s (a few ]s or shorter) that can image objects as small as a loaf of bread. | |||
Radar relies on its own transmissions rather than light from the Sun or the Moon, or from ] emitted by the target objects themselves, such as infrared radiation (heat). This process of directing artificial radio waves towards objects is called ''illumination'', although radio waves are invisible to the human eye as well as optical cameras. | |||
Short radio waves reflect from curves and corners, in a way similar to glint from a rounded piece of glass. The most reflective targets for short wavelengths have 90° angles between the ]s. A structure consisting of three flat surfaces meeting at a single corner, like the corner on a box, will always reflect waves entering its opening directly back at the source. These so-called ]s are commonly used as radar reflectors to make otherwise difficult-to-detect objects easier to detect, and are often found on boats in order to improve their detection in a rescue situation and to reduce collisions. | |||
===Reflection=== | |||
For similar reasons, objects attempting to avoid detection will angle their surfaces in a way to eliminate inside corners and avoid surfaces and edges perpendicular to likely detection directions, which leads to "odd" looking ]. These precautions do not completely eliminate reflection because of ], especially at longer wavelengths. Half wavelength long wires or strips of conducting material, such as ], are very reflective but do not direct the scattered energy back toward the source. The extent to which an object reflects or scatters radio waves is called its ]. | |||
{{main|Reflection (physics)}} | |||
] image (of ]). The radar's frequency, pulse form, polarization, signal processing, and antenna determine what it can observe.]] | |||
If ] travelling through one material meet another material, having a different ] or ] from the first, | |||
===Radar equation=== | |||
the waves will reflect or scatter from the boundary between the materials. This means that a solid object in ] or in a ], or a significant change in atomic density between the object and what is surrounding it, will usually scatter radar (radio) waves from its surface. This is particularly true for ] materials such as metal and carbon fibre, making radar well-suited to the detection of aircraft and ships. ], containing ] and sometimes ] substances, is used on military vehicles to ]. This is the radio equivalent of painting something a dark colour so that it cannot be seen by the eye at night. | |||
The power ''P<sub>r</sub>'' returning to the receiving antenna is given by the radar equation: | |||
Radar waves scatter in a variety of ways depending on the size (wavelength) of the radio wave and the shape of the target. If the wavelength is much shorter than the target's size, the wave will bounce off in a way similar to the way light is reflected by a ]. If the wavelength is much longer than the size of the target, the target may not be visible because of poor reflection. Low-frequency radar technology is dependent on resonances for detection, but not identification, of targets. This is described by ], an effect that creates Earth's blue sky and red sunsets. When the two length scales are comparable, there may be ]s. Early radars used very long wavelengths that were larger than the targets and thus received a vague signal, whereas many modern systems use shorter wavelengths (a few centimetres or less) that can image objects as small as a loaf of bread. | |||
:<math>P_r = {{P_t G_t A_r \sigma F^4}\over{{(4\pi)}^2 R_t^2R_r^2}}</math> | |||
Short radio waves reflect from curves and corners in a way similar to glint from a rounded piece of glass. The most reflective targets for short wavelengths have 90° angles between the ]. A ] consists of three flat surfaces meeting like the inside corner of a cube. The structure will reflect waves entering its opening directly back to the source. They are commonly used as radar reflectors to make otherwise difficult-to-detect objects easier to detect. Corner reflectors on boats, for example, make them more detectable to avoid collision or during a rescue. For similar reasons, objects intended to avoid detection will not have inside corners or surfaces and edges perpendicular to likely detection directions, which leads to "odd" looking ]. These precautions do not totally eliminate reflection because of ], especially at longer wavelengths. Half wavelength long wires or strips of conducting material, such as ], are very reflective but do not direct the scattered energy back toward the source. The extent to which an object reflects or scatters radio waves is called its ]. | |||
===Radar range equation=== | |||
The power ''P<sub>r</sub>'' returning to the receiving antenna is given by the equation: | |||
:<math>P_{r}=\frac{P_{t}G_{t}A_{r}\sigma F^{4}}{{(4\pi )}^{2}R_{t}^{2}R_{r}^{2}}</math> | |||
where | where | ||
*''P''<sub>t</sub> = transmitter power | * ''P''<sub>t</sub> = transmitter power | ||
*''G''<sub>t</sub> = ] of the transmitting antenna | * ''G''<sub>t</sub> = ] of the transmitting antenna | ||
*''A''<sub>r</sub> = effective aperture (area) of the receiving antenna | * ''A''<sub>r</sub> = ] (area) of the receiving antenna; this can also be expressed as <math>{G_r\lambda^2}\over{4\pi}</math>, where | ||
:* <math>\lambda</math> = transmitted wavelength | |||
*''σ'' = ], or scattering coefficient, of the target | |||
:* ''G''<sub>r</sub> = gain of receiving antenna<ref>{{cite book |last=Stimson |first=George |url=https://archive.org/details/introductiontoai0000stim/page/98 |title=Introduction to Airborne Radar |date=1998 |publisher=SciTech Publishing Inc. |isbn=978-1-891121-01-2 |page=98 |url-access=registration}}</ref> | |||
*''F'' = pattern propagation factor | |||
*'' |
* ''σ'' = ], or scattering coefficient, of the target | ||
* ''F'' = pattern propagation factor | |||
*''R''<sub>r</sub> = distance from the target to the receiver. | |||
* ''R''<sub>t</sub> = distance from the transmitter to the target | |||
* ''R''<sub>r</sub> = distance from the target to the receiver. | |||
In the common case where the transmitter and the receiver are at the same location, ''R''<sub>t</sub> = ''R''<sub>r</sub> and the term ''R''<sub>t</sub>² ''R''<sub>r</sub>² can be replaced by ''R''<sup>4</sup>, where ''R'' is the range. | In the common case where the transmitter and the receiver are at the same location, ''R''<sub>t</sub> = ''R''<sub>r</sub> and the term ''R''<sub>t</sub>² ''R''<sub>r</sub>² can be replaced by ''R''<sup>4</sup>, where ''R'' is the range. | ||
Line 91: | Line 123: | ||
:<math>P_r = {{P_t G_t A_r \sigma F^4}\over{{(4\pi)}^2 R^4}}.</math> | :<math>P_r = {{P_t G_t A_r \sigma F^4}\over{{(4\pi)}^2 R^4}}.</math> | ||
This shows that the received power declines as the fourth power of the range, which means that the |
This shows that the received power declines as the fourth power of the range, which means that the received power from distant targets is relatively very small. | ||
Additional filtering and pulse integration modifies the radar equation slightly for ], which can be used to increase detection range and reduce transmit power. | |||
The equation above with ''F'' = 1 is a simplification for ] without interference. The propagation factor accounts for the effects of ] and shadowing and depends on the details of the environment. In a real-world situation, ] effects should also be considered. | |||
The equation above with ''F'' = 1 is a simplification for transmission in a vacuum without interference. The propagation factor accounts for the effects of ] and shadowing and depends on the details of the environment. In a real-world situation, ] effects are also considered. | |||
===Doppler effect=== | |||
{{Main|Doppler radar|Pulse-Doppler radar}} | |||
] caused by motion of the source]] | |||
Frequency shift is caused by motion that changes the number of wavelengths between the reflector and the radar. This can degrade or enhance radar performance depending upon how it affects the detection process. As an example, ] can interact with Doppler to produce signal cancellation at certain radial velocities, which degrades performance. | |||
Sea-based radar systems, ], ], ], military aircraft, and ] rely on the Doppler effect to enhance performance. This produces information about target velocity during the detection process. This also allows small objects to be detected in an environment containing much larger nearby slow moving objects. | |||
Doppler shift depends upon whether the radar configuration is active or passive. Active radar transmits a signal that is reflected back to the receiver. Passive radar depends upon the object sending a signal to the receiver. | |||
The Doppler frequency shift for active radar is as follows, where <math>F_D</math> is Doppler frequency, <math>F_T</math> is transmit frequency, <math>V_R</math> is radial velocity, and <math>C</math> is the speed of light:<ref>{{cite news|title=Exploration: The Doppler Effect|author=M. Castelaz|publisher=Pisgah Astronomical Research Institute}}</ref> | |||
:<math>F_D = 2 \times F_T \times \left (\frac {V_R}{C} \right)</math>. | |||
Passive radar is applicable to ] and ] as follows: | |||
:<math>F_D = F_T \times \left (\frac {V_R}{C} \right)</math>. | |||
Only the radial component of the velocity is relevant. When the reflector is moving at right angle to the radar beam, it has no relative velocity. Objects moving parallel to the radar beam produce the maximum Doppler frequency shift. | |||
When the transmit frequency (<math>F_T</math>) is pulsed, using a pulse repeat frequency of <math>F_R</math>, the resulting frequency spectrum will contain harmonic frequencies above and below <math>F_T</math> with a distance of <math>F_R</math>. As a result, the Doppler measurement is only non-ambiguous if the Doppler frequency shift is less than half of <math>F_R</math>, called the ], since the returned frequency otherwise cannot be distinguished from shifting of a harmonic frequency above or below, thus requiring: | |||
:<math>|F_D| < \frac {F_R}{2}</math> | |||
Or when substituting with <math>F_D</math>: | |||
:<math>|V_R| < \frac {F_R \times \frac {C}{F_T}}{4}</math> | |||
As an example, a Doppler weather radar with a pulse rate of 2 kHz and transmit frequency of 1 GHz can reliably measure weather speed up to at most {{convert|150|m/s|mph|abbr=on}}, thus cannot reliably determine radial velocity of aircraft moving {{convert|1000|m/s|mph|abbr=on}}. | |||
===Polarization=== | ===Polarization=== | ||
{{further|Polarization (waves)}} | |||
In the transmitted radar signal, the electric field is perpendicular to the direction of propagation, and this direction of the electric field is the polarization of the wave. Radars use horizontal, vertical, linear and circular polarization to detect different types of reflections. For example, ] is used to minimize the interference caused by rain. ] returns usually indicate metal surfaces. ] polarization returns usually indicate a ] surface, such as rocks or soil, and are used by ] radars. | |||
In all ], the electric field is perpendicular to the direction of propagation, and the electric field direction is the ] of the wave. For a transmitted radar signal, the polarization can be controlled to yield different effects. Radars use horizontal, vertical, linear, and circular polarization to detect different types of reflections. For example, ] is used to minimize the interference caused by rain. ] returns usually indicate metal surfaces. Random polarization returns usually indicate a ] surface, such as rocks or soil, and are used by navigation radars. | |||
=== |
===Limiting factors=== | ||
Radar systems must overcome unwanted signals in order to focus only on the actual targets of interest. These unwanted signals may originate from internal and external sources, both passive and active. The ability of the radar system to overcome these unwanted signals defines its ] (SNR). SNR is defined as the ratio of a signal power to the noise power within the desired signal. | |||
====Beam path and range==== | |||
In less technical terms, SNR compares the level of a desired signal (such as targets) to the level of background noise. The higher a system's SNR, the better it is in isolating actual targets from the surrounding noise signals. | |||
{{see also|Beam forming|Over-the-horizon radar}} | |||
] | |||
A radar beam follows a linear path in vacuum but follows a somewhat curved path in atmosphere due to variation in the ] of air, which is called the ]. Even when the beam is emitted parallel to the ground, the beam rises above the ground as the ] sinks below the horizon. Furthermore, the signal is attenuated by the medium the beam crosses, and the beam disperses. | |||
The maximum range of conventional radar can be limited by a number of factors: | |||
* Line of sight, which depends on the height above the ground. Without a direct line of sight, the path of the beam is blocked. | |||
* The maximum non-ambiguous range, which is determined by the ]. The maximum non-ambiguous range is the distance the pulse can travel to and return from before the next pulse is emitted. | |||
* Radar sensitivity and the power of the return signal as computed in the radar equation. This component includes factors such as the environmental conditions and the size (or radar cross section) of the target. | |||
====Noise==== | ====Noise==== | ||
{{main|Noise (electronics)|Noise (radio)}} | |||
] is an internal source of random variations in the signal, which is generated by all electronic components. Noise typically appears as random variations superimposed on the desired echo signal received in the radar receiver. The lower the power of the desired signal, the more difficult it is to discern it from the noise (similar to trying to hear a whisper while standing near a busy road). ] is a measure of the noise produced by a receiver compared to an ideal receiver, and this needs to be minimized. | |||
Signal noise is an internal source of random variations in the signal, which is generated by all electronic components. | |||
Reflected signals decline rapidly as distance increases, so noise introduces a radar range limitation. The ] and ] are two different ] that affect range performance. Reflectors that are too far away produce too little signal to exceed the noise floor and cannot be detected. ] requires a signal that exceeds the ] by at least the signal-to-noise ratio. | |||
Noise typically appears as random variations superimposed on the desired echo signal received in the radar receiver. The lower the power of the desired signal, the more difficult it is to discern it from the noise. The ] is a measure of the noise produced by a receiver compared to an ideal receiver, and this needs to be minimized. | |||
] is produced by electrons in transit across a discontinuity, which occurs in all detectors. Shot noise is the dominant source in most receivers. There will also be ] caused by electron transit through amplification devices, which is reduced using ] amplification. Another reason for heterodyne processing is that for fixed fractional bandwidth, the instantaneous bandwidth increases linearly in frequency. This allows improved range resolution. The one notable exception to heterodyne (downconversion) radar systems is ] radar. Here a single cycle, or transient wave, is used similar to UWB communications, see ]. | |||
Noise is also generated by external sources, most importantly the natural thermal radiation of the background surrounding the target of interest. In modern radar systems, the internal noise is typically about equal to or lower than the external noise. An exception is if the radar is aimed upwards at clear sky, where the scene is so "cold" that it generates very little ]. The thermal noise is given by ''k''<sub>B</sub> ''T'' ''B'', where ''T'' is temperature, ''B'' is bandwidth (post matched filter) and ''k''<sub>B</sub> is the ]. There is an appealing intuitive interpretation of this relationship in a radar. Matched filtering allows the entire energy received from a target to be compressed into a single bin (be it a range, Doppler, elevation, or azimuth bin). On the surface it appears that then within a fixed interval of time, perfect, error free, detection could be obtained. This is done by compressing all energy into an infinitesimal time slice. What limits this approach in the real world is that, while time is arbitrarily divisible, current is not. The quantum of electrical energy is an electron, and so the best that can be done is to match filter all energy into a single electron. Since the electron is moving at a certain temperature (]) this noise source cannot be further eroded. Ultimately, radar, like all macro-scale entities, is profoundly impacted by quantum theory. | |||
Noise is random and target signals are not. Signal processing can take advantage of this phenomenon to reduce the noise floor using two strategies. The kind of signal integration used with ] can improve noise up to <math>\sqrt{2}</math> for each stage. The signal can also be split among multiple filters for ], which reduces the noise floor by the number of filters. These improvements depend upon ]. | |||
Noise is also generated by external sources, most importantly the natural thermal radiation of the background scene surrounding the target of interest. In modern radar systems, due to the high performance of their receivers, the internal noise is typically about equal to or lower than the external scene noise. An exception is if the radar is aimed upwards at clear sky, where the scene is so "cold" that it generates very little ]. | |||
====Interference==== | |||
There will be also ] due to electrons transit, but depending on 1/f, will be much lower than thermal noise when the frequency is high. Hence, in pulse radar, the system will be always ]. See ]. | |||
{{main|Interference (wave propagation)}} | |||
Radar systems must overcome unwanted signals in order to focus on the targets of interest. These unwanted signals may originate from internal and external sources, both passive and active. The ability of the radar system to overcome these unwanted signals defines its ] (SNR). SNR is defined as the ratio of the signal power to the noise power within the desired signal; it compares the level of a desired target signal to the level of background noise (atmospheric noise and noise generated within the receiver). The higher a system's SNR the better it is at discriminating actual targets from noise signals. | |||
====Clutter==== | ====Clutter==== | ||
] from a target cause ghosts to appear]] | |||
Clutter refers to radio frequency (RF) echoes returned from targets which are uninteresting to the radar operators. Such targets include natural objects such as ground, sea, ] (such as rain, snow or hail), ]s, animals (especially birds), atmospheric ], and other atmospheric effects, such as ] reflections, ] trails, and ]. Clutter may also be returned from man-made objects such as buildings and, intentionally, by radar countermeasures such as ]. | |||
{{main|Clutter (radar)}} | |||
Clutter refers to radio frequency (RF) echoes returned from targets which are uninteresting to radar operators. Such targets include man-made objects such as buildings and — intentionally — by radar countermeasures such as ]. Such targets also include natural objects such as ground, sea, and — when not being tasked for meteorological purposes — ], ], ]s, animals (especially birds), turbulence in the ], and ] trails. Radar clutter can also be caused by other atmospheric phenomena, such as disturbances in the ] caused by ]s or other ] events. This phenomenon is especially apparent near the ]s, where the action of the ] on the earth's ] produces convection patterns in the ionospheric ].<ref name="Riddolls-2006">{{Cite tech report|last=Riddolls|first=Ryan J|title=A Canadian Perspective on High-Frequency Over-the-Horizon Radar|number=DRDC Ottawa TM 2006-285|page=38|publisher=]|location=Ottawa, Ontario, Canada|date=December 2006|url=https://cradpdf.drdc-rddc.gc.ca/PDFS/unc81/p527279.pdf|access-date=2 December 2023}}</ref> Radar clutter can degrade the ability of ] to detect targets.<ref name="Riddolls-2006"/><ref name="Elkins-1980">{{cite tech report|last=Elkins|first=TJ|author-link=Terence James Elkins|title=A model for high frequency radar auroral clutter|page=9|series=RADC Technical Reports|volume=1980|number=RADC-TR-80-122|publisher=]|location=Rome, New York|date=March 1980|url=https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA091049.pdf|access-date=2 December 2023}}</ref> | |||
Some clutter may also be caused by a long radar ] between the radar transceiver and the antenna. In a typical ] (PPI) radar with a rotating antenna, this will usually be seen as a "sun" or "sunburst" in the |
Some clutter may also be caused by a long radar ] between the radar transceiver and the antenna. In a typical ] (PPI) radar with a rotating antenna, this will usually be seen as a "sun" or "sunburst" in the center of the display as the receiver responds to echoes from dust particles and misguided RF in the waveguide. Adjusting the timing between when the transmitter sends a pulse and when the receiver stage is enabled will generally reduce the sunburst without affecting the accuracy of the range since most sunburst is caused by a diffused transmit pulse reflected before it leaves the antenna. Clutter is considered a passive interference source since it only appears in response to radar signals sent by the radar. | ||
Clutter is detected and neutralized in several ways. Clutter tends to appear static between radar scans; on subsequent scan echoes, desirable targets will appear to move, and all stationary echoes can be eliminated. Sea clutter can be reduced by using horizontal polarization, while rain is reduced with ] (meteorological radars wish for the opposite effect, and therefore use ] to detect precipitation). Other methods attempt to increase the signal-to-clutter ratio. | |||
While some clutter sources may be undesirable for some radar applications (such as storm clouds for air-defence radars), they may be desirable for others (] radars in this example). Clutter is considered a passive interference source, since it only appears in response to radar signals sent by the radar. | |||
Clutter moves with the wind or is stationary. Two common strategies to improve ] in a clutter environment are: | |||
There are several methods of detecting and neutralizing clutter. Many of these methods rely on the fact that clutter tends to appear static between radar scans. Therefore, when comparing subsequent scans echoes, desirable targets will appear to move and all stationary echoes can be eliminated. Sea clutter can be reduced by using horizontal polarization, while rain is reduced with ] (note that meteorological radars wish for the opposite effect, therefore using ] the better to detect precipitation). Other methods attempt to increase the signal-to-clutter ratio. | |||
:* Moving target indication, which integrates successive pulses | |||
:* Doppler processing, which uses filters to separate clutter from desirable signals | |||
The most effective clutter reduction technique is ]. Doppler separates clutter from aircraft and spacecraft using a ], so individual signals can be separated from multiple reflectors located in the same volume using velocity differences. This requires a coherent transmitter. Another technique uses a ] that subtracts the received signal from two successive pulses using phase to reduce signals from slow-moving objects. This can be adapted for systems that lack a coherent transmitter, such as ]. | |||
] (CFAR, a form of ], or AGC) is a method relying on the fact that clutter returns far outnumber echoes from targets of interest. The receiver's gain is automatically adjusted to maintain a constant level of overall visible clutter. While this does not help detect targets masked by stronger surrounding clutter, it does help to distinguish strong target sources. In the past, radar AGC was electronically controlled and affected the gain of the entire radar receiver. As radars evolved, AGC became computer-software controlled, and affected the gain with greater granularity, in specific detection cells. | |||
], a form of ] (AGC), is a method that relies on clutter returns far outnumbering echoes from targets of interest. The receiver's gain is automatically adjusted to maintain a constant level of overall visible clutter. While this does not help detect targets masked by stronger surrounding clutter, it does help to distinguish strong target sources. In the past, radar AGC was electronically controlled and affected the gain of the entire radar receiver. As radars evolved, AGC became computer-software-controlled and affected the gain with greater granularity in specific detection cells. | |||
] ] from a target cause ]s to appear.]] | |||
Clutter may also originate from |
Clutter may also originate from multipath echoes from valid targets caused by ground reflection, ]ing or ]/] (e.g., ]). This clutter type is especially bothersome since it appears to move and behave like other normal (point) targets of interest. In a typical scenario, an aircraft echo is reflected from the ground below, appearing to the receiver as an identical target below the correct one. The radar may try to unify the targets, reporting the target at an incorrect height, or eliminating it on the basis of ] or a physical impossibility. Terrain bounce jamming exploits this response by amplifying the radar signal and directing it downward.<ref>{{Cite thesis|last=Strasser|first=Nancy C.|title=Investigation of Terrain Bounce Electronic Countermeasure|pages=1–104|publisher=]|location=Wright-Patterson AFB, Dayton, Ohio|date=December 1980|oclc=|url=https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/tr/pdf/ADA101208.pdf|access-date=2 December 2023|archive-date=7 October 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241007062110/https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/tr/pdf/ADA101208.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> These problems can be overcome by incorporating a ground map of the radar's surroundings and eliminating all echoes which appear to originate below ground or above a certain height. Monopulse can be improved by altering the elevation algorithm used at low elevation. In newer air traffic control radar equipment, algorithms are used to identify the false targets by comparing the current pulse returns to those adjacent, as well as calculating return improbabilities. | ||
====Jamming==== | ====Jamming==== | ||
{{main|Radar jamming and deception}} | |||
] refers to radio frequency signals originating from sources outside the radar, transmitting in the radar's frequency and thereby masking targets of interest. Jamming may be intentional, as with an ] (EW) tactic, or unintentional, as with friendly forces operating equipment that transmits using the same frequency range. Jamming is considered an active interference source, since it is initiated by elements outside the radar and in general unrelated to the radar signals. | |||
Radar jamming refers to radio frequency signals originating from sources outside the radar, transmitting in the radar's frequency and thereby masking targets of interest. Jamming may be intentional, as with an ] tactic, or unintentional, as with friendly forces operating equipment that transmits using the same frequency range. Jamming is considered an active interference source, since it is initiated by elements outside the radar and in general unrelated to the radar signals. | |||
Jamming is problematic to radar since the jamming signal only needs to travel one |
Jamming is problematic to radar since the jamming signal only needs to travel one way (from the jammer to the radar receiver) whereas the radar echoes travel two ways (radar-target-radar) and are therefore significantly reduced in power by the time they return to the radar receiver in accordance with ]. Jammers therefore can be much less powerful than their jammed radars and still effectively mask targets along the ] from the jammer to the radar (''mainlobe jamming''). Jammers have an added effect of affecting radars along other lines of sight through the radar receiver's ]s (''sidelobe jamming''). | ||
Mainlobe jamming can generally only be reduced by narrowing the mainlobe ] |
Mainlobe jamming can generally only be reduced by narrowing the mainlobe ] and cannot fully be eliminated when directly facing a jammer which uses the same frequency and polarization as the radar. Sidelobe jamming can be overcome by reducing receiving sidelobes in the radar antenna design and by using an ] to detect and disregard non-mainlobe signals. ] are ] and ]. | ||
==Signal processing== | |||
Interference has recently become a problem for ] (5.66 ]) meteorological radars with the proliferation of 5.4 GHz band ] equipment.<ref></ref> | |||
==Radar signal processing== | |||
===Distance measurement=== | ===Distance measurement=== | ||
====Transit time==== | ====Transit time==== | ||
{{further|Time of flight}} | |||
]] | |||
] | |||
One way to measure the distance to an object is to transmit a short pulse of radio signal (electromagnetic radiation), and measure the time it takes for the reflection to return. The distance is one-half the product of the round trip time (because the signal has to travel to the target and then back to the receiver) and the speed of the signal. Since radio waves travel at the speed of light (186,000 ]s per second or 300,000,000 meters per second), accurate distance measurement requires high-performance electronics. | |||
One way to obtain a ] (ranging) is based on the ]: transmit a short pulse of radio signal (electromagnetic radiation) and measure the time it takes for the reflection to return. The distance is one-half the round trip time multiplied by the speed of the signal. The factor of one-half comes from the fact that the signal has to travel to the object and back again. Since radio waves travel at the ], accurate distance measurement requires high-speed electronics. | |||
In most cases, the receiver does not detect the return while the signal is being transmitted. Through the use of a device called a ''duplexer'', the radar switches between transmitting and receiving at a predetermined rate. The minimum range is calculated by measuring the length of the pulse multiplied by the speed of light, divided by two. In order to detect closer targets one must use a shorter pulse length. | |||
In most cases, the receiver does not detect the return while the signal is being transmitted. Through the use of a duplexer, the radar switches between transmitting and receiving at a predetermined rate. | |||
A similar effect imposes a maximum range as well. In order to maximize range, longer times between pulses should be used, referred to as a pulse repetition time, or its reciprocal, pulse repetition frequency. | |||
These two effects tend to be at odds with each other, and it is not easy to combine both good short range and good long range in a single radar. This is because the short pulses needed for a good minimum range broadcast have less total energy, making the returns much smaller and the target harder to detect. This could be offset by using more pulses, but this would shorten the maximum range. So each radar uses a particular type of signal. Long-range radars tend to use long pulses with long delays between them, and short range radars use smaller pulses with less time between them. As electronics have improved many radars now can change their pulse repetition frequency, thereby changing their range. The newest radars fire two pulses during one cell, one for short range (about {{convert|10|km|miles|abbr=on}}) and a separate signal for longer ranges (about {{convert|100|km|miles|abbr=on}}). | |||
A similar effect imposes a maximum range as well. If the return from the target comes in when the next pulse is being sent out, once again the receiver cannot tell the difference. In order to maximize range, longer times between pulses should be used, referred to as a pulse repetition time (PRT), or its reciprocal, pulse repetition frequency (PRF). | |||
Distance may also be measured as a function of time. The '''radar mile''' is the time it takes for a radar pulse to travel one ], reflect off a target, and return to the radar antenna. Since a nautical mile is defined as 1,852 m, then dividing this distance by the speed of light (299,792,458 m/s), and then multiplying the result by 2 yields a result of 12.36 μs in duration. | |||
These two effects tend to be at odds with each other, and it is not easy to combine both good short range and good long range in a single radar. This is because the short pulses needed for a good minimum range broadcast have less total energy, making the returns much smaller and the target harder to detect. This could be offset by using more pulses, but this would shorten the maximum range again. So each radar uses a particular type of signal. Long-range radars tend to use long pulses with long delays between them, and short range radars use smaller pulses with less time between them. This pattern of pulses and pauses is known as the ] (or PRF), and is one of the main ways to characterize a radar. As electronics have improved many radars now can change their PRF thereby changing their range. The newest radars fire 2 pulses during one cell, one for short range 10 km / 6 miles and a separate signal for longer ranges 100 km /60 miles. | |||
====Frequency modulation==== | |||
The distance ] and the characteristics of the received signal as compared to noise depends heavily on the shape of the pulse. The pulse is often ] to achieve better performance using a technique known as ]. | |||
] | |||
{{main|Frequency modulation}} | |||
Distance may also be measured as a function of time. The ] is the amount of time it takes for a radar pulse to travel one ], reflect off a target, and return to the radar antenna. Since a nautical mile is defined as ''exactly'' 1,852 meters, then dividing this distance by the speed of light (''exactly'' 299,792,458 meters per second), and then multiplying the result by 2 (round trip = twice the distance), yields a result of approximately 12.36 microseconds in duration. | |||
Another form of distance measuring radar is based on frequency modulation. In these systems, the frequency of the transmitted signal is changed over time. Since the signal takes a finite time to travel to and from the target, the received signal is a different frequency than what the transmitter is broadcasting at the time the reflected signal arrives back at the radar. By comparing the frequency of the two signals the difference can be easily measured. This is easily accomplished with very high accuracy even in 1940s electronics. A further advantage is that the radar can operate effectively at relatively low frequencies. This was important in the early development of this type when high-frequency signal generation was difficult or expensive. | |||
This technique can be used in ] and is often found in aircraft ]s. In these systems a "carrier" radar signal is frequency modulated in a predictable way, typically varying up and down with a ] or sawtooth pattern at audio frequencies. The signal is then sent out from one antenna and received on another, typically located on the bottom of the aircraft, and the signal can be continuously compared using a simple ''beat frequency'' modulator that produces an audio frequency tone from the returned signal and a portion of the transmitted signal. | |||
====Frequency modulation==== | |||
Another form of distance measuring radar is based on ]. Frequency comparison between two signals is considerably more accurate, even with older electronics, than timing the signal. By changing the frequency of the returned signal and comparing that with the original, the difference can be easily measured. | |||
The ] riding on the receive signal is proportional to the time delay between the radar and the reflector. The frequency shift becomes greater with greater time delay. The frequency shift is directly proportional to the distance travelled. That distance can be displayed on an instrument, and it may also be available via the ]. This signal processing is similar to that used in speed detecting Doppler radar. Example systems using this approach are ], ], and ]. | |||
This technique can be used in ], and is often found in aircraft ]s. In these systems a "carrier" radar signal is frequency modulated in a predictable way, typically varying up and down with a ] or sawtooth pattern at audio frequencies. The signal is then sent out from one antenna and received on another, typically located on the bottom of the aircraft, and the signal can be continuously compared using a simple ''beat frequency'' modulator that produces an audio frequency tone from the returned signal and a portion of the transmitted signal. | |||
Terrestrial radar uses low-power FM signals that cover a larger frequency range. The multiple reflections are analyzed mathematically for pattern changes with multiple passes creating a computerized synthetic image. Doppler effects are used which allows slow moving objects to be detected as well as largely eliminating "noise" from the surfaces of bodies of water. | |||
Since the signal frequency is changing, by the time the signal returns to the aircraft the broadcast has shifted to some other frequency. The amount of that shift is greater over longer times, so greater frequency differences mean a longer distance, the exact amount being the "ramp speed" selected by the electronics. The amount of shift is therefore directly related to the distance traveled, and can be displayed on an instrument. This signal processing is similar to that used in speed detecting ] radar. Example systems using this approach are ], ], and ]. | |||
====Pulse compression==== | |||
A further advantage is that the radar can operate effectively at relatively low frequencies, comparable to that used by UHF television. This was important in the early development of this type when high frequency signal generation was difficult or expensive. | |||
{{main|Pulse compression}} | |||
The two techniques outlined above both have their disadvantages. The pulse timing technique has an inherent tradeoff in that the accuracy of the distance measurement is inversely related to the length of the pulse, while the energy, and thus direction range, is directly related. Increasing power for longer range while maintaining accuracy demands extremely high peak power, with 1960s ]s often operating in the tens of megawatts. The continuous wave methods spread this energy out in time and thus require much lower peak power compared to pulse techniques, but requires some method of allowing the sent and received signals to operate at the same time, often demanding two separate antennas. | |||
A new terrestrial radar uses low-power FM signals that cover a larger frequency range. The multiple reflections are analyzed mathematically for pattern changes with multiple passes creating a computerized synthetic image. Doppler effects are not utilized which allows slow moving objects to be detected as well as largely eliminating "noise" from the surfaces of bodies of water. Used primarily for detection of intruders approaching in small boats or intruders crawling on the ground toward an objective. | |||
The introduction of new electronics in the 1960s allowed the two techniques to be combined. It starts with a longer pulse that is also frequency modulated. Spreading the broadcast energy out in time means lower peak energies can be used, with modern examples typically on the order of tens of kilowatts. On reception, the signal is sent into a system that delays different frequencies by different times. The resulting output is a much shorter pulse that is suitable for accurate distance measurement, while also compressing the received energy into a much higher energy peak and thus reducing the signal-to-noise ratio. The technique is largely universal on modern large radars. | |||
===Speed measurement=== | ===Speed measurement=== | ||
] is the change in |
] is the change in distance to an object with respect to time. Thus the existing system for measuring distance, combined with a memory capacity to see where the target last was, is enough to measure speed. At one time the memory consisted of a user making ] marks on the radar screen and then calculating the speed using a ]. Modern radar systems perform the equivalent operation faster and more accurately using computers. | ||
If the transmitter's output is coherent (phase synchronized), there is another effect that can be used to make almost instant speed measurements (no memory is required), known as the ]. Most modern radar systems use this principle into ] and ] systems (], military radar). The Doppler effect is only able to determine the relative speed of the target along the line of sight from the radar to the target. Any component of target velocity perpendicular to the line of sight cannot be determined by using the Doppler effect alone, but it can be determined by tracking the target's ] over time. | |||
It is |
It is possible to make a Doppler radar without any pulsing, known as a ] (CW radar), by sending out a very pure signal of a known frequency. CW radar is ideal for determining the radial component of a target's velocity. CW radar is typically used by traffic enforcement to measure vehicle speed quickly and accurately where the range is not important. | ||
When using a pulsed radar, the variation between the phase of successive returns gives the distance the target has moved between pulses, and thus its speed can be calculated. | |||
Other mathematical developments in radar signal processing include ] (] or ]), as well as the ] which makes use of the fact that radar returns from moving targets typically "chirp" (change their frequency as a function of time, as does the sound of a bird or bat). | |||
Other mathematical developments in radar signal processing include ] (Weyl Heisenberg or ]), as well as the ] which makes use of the change of frequency of returns from moving targets ("chirp"). | |||
===Pulse-Doppler signal processing=== | |||
{{main|Pulse-Doppler signal processing}} | |||
] | |||
Pulse-Doppler signal processing includes frequency filtering in the detection process. The space between each transmit pulse is divided into range cells or range gates. Each cell is filtered independently much like the process used by a ] to produce the display showing different frequencies. Each different distance produces a different spectrum. These spectra are used to perform the detection process. This is required to achieve acceptable performance in hostile environments involving weather, terrain, and electronic countermeasures. | |||
The primary purpose is to measure both the amplitude and frequency of the aggregate reflected signal from multiple distances. This is used with ] to measure radial wind velocity and precipitation rate in each different volume of air. This is linked with computing systems to produce a real-time electronic weather map. Aircraft safety depends upon continuous access to accurate weather radar information that is used to prevent injuries and accidents. Weather radar uses a ]. Coherency requirements are not as strict as those for military systems because individual signals ordinarily do not need to be separated. Less sophisticated filtering is required, and range ambiguity processing is not normally needed with weather radar in comparison with military radar intended to track air vehicles. | |||
The alternate purpose is "]" capability required to improve military air combat survivability. Pulse-Doppler is also used for ground based surveillance radar required to defend personnel and vehicles.<ref name="Syracuse Research Corporation; Massachusetts Institute of Technology">{{cite web|url=https://www.mit.edu/~lrv/cornell/publications/Ground%20Surveillance%20Radars%20and%20Military%20Intelligence.pdf|title=Ground Surveillance Radars and Military Intelligence|publisher=Syracuse Research Corporation; Massachusetts Institute of Technology|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100922174712/http://www.mit.edu/~lrv/cornell/publications/Ground%20Surveillance%20Radars%20and%20Military%20Intelligence.pdf|archive-date=22 September 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B0q1Pgz6Cm8| archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211030/B0q1Pgz6Cm8| archive-date=30 October 2021|title=AN/PPS-5 Ground Surveillance Radar| date=29 December 2009|via=YouTube; jaglavaksoldier's Channel}}{{cbignore}}</ref> Pulse-doppler signal processing increases the maximum detection distance using less radiation close to aircraft pilots, shipboard personnel, infantry, and artillery. Reflections from terrain, water, and weather produce signals much larger than aircraft and missiles, which allows fast moving vehicles to hide using ] flying techniques and ] to avoid detection until an attack vehicle is too close to destroy. Pulse-Doppler signal processing incorporates more sophisticated electronic filtering that safely eliminates this kind of weakness. This requires the use of medium pulse-repetition frequency with phase coherent hardware that has a large dynamic range. Military applications require ] which prevents range from being determined directly, and ] processing is required to identify the true range of all reflected signals. Radial movement is usually linked with Doppler frequency to produce a lock signal that cannot be produced by radar jamming signals. Pulse-Doppler signal processing also produces audible signals that can be used for threat identification.<ref name="Syracuse Research Corporation; Massachusetts Institute of Technology"/> | |||
===Reduction of interference effects=== | ===Reduction of interference effects=== | ||
] is employed in radar systems to reduce the ]. Signal processing techniques include ] |
] is employed in radar systems to reduce the ]. Signal processing techniques include ], ], moving target detection processors, correlation with ] targets, ], and ]. ] and ] processing are also used in clutter environments. | ||
===Plot |
===Plot and track extraction=== | ||
{{Main|Radar tracker|Track algorithm}} | |||
Radar video returns on aircraft can be subjected to a plot extraction process whereby spurious and interfering signals are discarded. A sequence of target returns can be monitored through a device known as a plot extractor. The non relevant real time returns can be removed from the displayed information and a single plot displayed. In some radar systems, or alternatively in the command and control system to which the radar is connected, a ] is used to associate the sequence of plots belonging to individual targets and estimate the targets' headings and speeds. | |||
A track algorithm is a radar performance enhancement strategy. Tracking algorithms provide the ability to predict the future position of multiple moving objects based on the history of the individual positions being reported by sensor systems. | |||
==Radar engineering== | |||
] | |||
A radars components are: | |||
Historical information is accumulated and used to predict future position for use with air traffic control, threat estimation, combat system doctrine, gun aiming, and missile guidance. Position data is accumulated by radar sensors over the span of a few minutes. | |||
* A ] that generates the radio signal with an oscillator such as a ] or a ] and controls its duration by a ]. | |||
There are four common track algorithms:<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.aticourses.com/fundamentals_radar_tracking.htm |title=Fundamentals of Radar Tracking |publisher=Applied Technology Institute |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110824221707/http://www.aticourses.com/fundamentals_radar_tracking.htm |archive-date=24 August 2011 }}</ref> | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* Multiple Hypothesis Tracking | |||
* Interactive Multiple Model (IMM) | |||
Radar video returns from aircraft can be subjected to a plot extraction process whereby spurious and interfering signals are discarded. A sequence of target returns can be monitored through a device known as a plot extractor. | |||
The non-relevant real time returns can be removed from the displayed information and a single plot displayed. In some radar systems, or alternatively in the command and control system to which the radar is connected, a ] is used to associate the sequence of plots belonging to individual targets and estimate the targets' headings and speeds. | |||
==Engineering== | |||
{{main|Radar engineering details}} | |||
] | |||
A radar's components are: | |||
* A ] that generates the radio signal with an oscillator such as a ] or a ] and controls its duration by a ]. | |||
* A ] that links the transmitter and the antenna. | * A ] that links the transmitter and the antenna. | ||
* A ] that serves as a switch between the antenna and the transmitter or the receiver for the signal when the antenna is used in both situations. | * A ] that serves as a switch between the antenna and the transmitter or the receiver for the signal when the antenna is used in both situations. | ||
* A ]. Knowing the shape of the desired received signal (a pulse), an optimal receiver can be designed using a ]. | * A ]. Knowing the shape of the desired received signal (a pulse), an optimal receiver can be designed using a ]. | ||
* A display processor to produce signals for human readable ]. | |||
* An electronic section that controls all those devices and the antenna to perform the radar scan ordered by a ]. | |||
* An electronic section that controls all those devices and the antenna to perform the radar scan ordered by software. | |||
* A link to end users. | |||
* A link to end user devices and displays. | |||
===Antenna design=== | ===Antenna design=== | ||
{{main|Antenna (radio)}} | |||
] | |||
Radio signals broadcast from a single antenna will spread out in all directions, and likewise a single antenna will receive signals equally from all directions. This leaves the radar with the problem of deciding where the target object is located. | Radio signals broadcast from a single antenna will spread out in all directions, and likewise a single antenna will receive signals equally from all directions. This leaves the radar with the problem of deciding where the target object is located. | ||
Early systems tended to use ], with directional receiver antennas which were pointed in various directions. For instance the first system to be deployed, |
Early systems tended to use ], with directional receiver antennas which were pointed in various directions. For instance, the first system to be deployed, Chain Home, used two straight antennas at ]s for reception, each on a different display. The maximum return would be detected with an antenna at right angles to the target, and a minimum with the antenna pointed directly at it (end on). The operator could determine the direction to a target by ] the antenna so one display showed a maximum while the other showed a minimum. | ||
One serious limitation with this type of solution is that the broadcast is sent out in all directions, so the amount of energy in the direction being examined is ] of that transmitted. To get a reasonable amount of power on the "target", the transmitting aerial should also be directional. | |||
One serious limitation with this type of solution is that the broadcast is sent out in all directions, so the amount of energy in the direction being examined is ] of that transmitted. To get a reasonable amount of power on the "target", the transmitting aerial should also be directional. | |||
====Parabolic reflector==== | ====Parabolic reflector==== | ||
] | |||
More modern systems use a steerable ] "dish" to create a tight broadcast beam, typically using the same dish as the receiver. Such systems often combine two radar frequencies in the same antenna in order to allow automatic steering, or '''radar lock'''. | |||
{{main|Parabolic antenna}} | |||
More modern systems use a steerable ] "dish" to create a tight broadcast beam, typically using the same dish as the receiver. Such systems often combine two radar frequencies in the same antenna in order to allow automatic steering, or ''radar lock''. | |||
Parabolic reflectors can be either symmetric parabolas or spoiled parabolas: | Parabolic reflectors can be either symmetric parabolas or spoiled parabolas: | ||
Symmetric parabolic antennas produce a narrow "pencil" beam in both the X and Y dimensions and consequently have a higher gain. The ] ] weather radar uses a symmetric antenna to perform detailed volumetric scans of the atmosphere. Spoiled parabolic antennas produce a narrow beam in one dimension and a relatively wide beam in the other. This feature is useful if target detection over a wide range of angles is more important than target location in three dimensions. Most 2D surveillance radars use a spoiled parabolic antenna with a narrow azimuthal beamwidth and wide vertical beamwidth. This beam configuration allows the radar operator to detect an aircraft at a specific azimuth but at an indeterminate height. Conversely, so-called "nodder" height finding radars use a dish with a narrow vertical beamwidth and wide azimuthal beamwidth to detect an aircraft at a specific height but with low azimuthal precision. | |||
] | |||
*Spoiled parabolic antennas produce a narrow beam in one dimension and a relatively wide beam in the other. This feature is useful if target detection over a wide range of angles is more important than target location in three dimensions. Most 2D surveillance radars use a spoiled parabolic antenna with a narrow azimuthal beamwidth and wide vertical beamwidth. This beam configuration allows the radar operator to detect an aircraft at a specific azimuth but at an indeterminate height. Conversely, so-called "nodder" height finding radars use a dish with a narrow vertical beamwidth and wide azimuthal beamwidth to detect an aircraft at a specific height but with low azimuthal precision. | |||
====Types of scan==== | ====Types of scan==== | ||
* Primary Scan: A scanning technique where the main antenna aerial is moved to produce a scanning beam, examples include circular scan, sector scan etc | * Primary Scan: A scanning technique where the main antenna aerial is moved to produce a scanning beam, examples include circular scan, sector scan, etc. | ||
* Secondary Scan: A scanning technique where the antenna feed is moved to produce a scanning beam, examples include conical scan, unidirectional sector scan, lobe switching etc. | * Secondary Scan: A scanning technique where the antenna feed is moved to produce a scanning beam, examples include conical scan, unidirectional sector scan, lobe switching, etc. | ||
* Palmer Scan: A scanning technique that produces a scanning beam by moving the main antenna and its feed. A Palmer Scan is a combination of a Primary Scan and a Secondary Scan. | * Palmer Scan: A scanning technique that produces a scanning beam by moving the main antenna and its feed. A Palmer Scan is a combination of a Primary Scan and a Secondary Scan. | ||
* ]: The radar beam is rotated in a small circle around the "boresight" axis, which is pointed at the target. | |||
====Slotted waveguide==== | ====Slotted waveguide==== | ||
] | ] | ||
{{Main|Slotted waveguide}} | {{Main|Slotted waveguide}} | ||
Applied similarly to the parabolic reflector, the slotted waveguide is moved mechanically to scan and is particularly suitable for non-tracking surface scan systems, where the vertical pattern may remain constant. Owing to its lower cost and less wind exposure, shipboard, airport surface, and harbour surveillance radars now use this in preference to |
Applied similarly to the parabolic reflector, the slotted waveguide is moved mechanically to scan and is particularly suitable for non-tracking surface scan systems, where the vertical pattern may remain constant. Owing to its lower cost and less wind exposure, shipboard, airport surface, and harbour surveillance radars now use this approach in preference to a parabolic antenna. | ||
====Phased array==== | ====Phased array==== | ||
]: Not all radar antennas must rotate to scan the sky.]] | ]: Not all radar antennas must rotate to scan the sky.]] | ||
{{Main|Phased array}} | {{Main|Phased array}} | ||
Another method of steering is used in a ] radar. | |||
Another method of steering is used in a phased array radar. This uses an array of similar aerials suitably spaced, the phase of the signal to each individual aerial being controlled so that the signal is reinforced in the desired direction and cancels in other directions. If the individual aerials are in one plane and the signal is fed to each aerial in phase with all others then the signal will reinforce in a direction perpendicular to that plane. By altering the relative phase of the signal fed to each aerial the direction of the beam can be moved because the direction of constructive interference will move. Because phased array radars require no physical ] the beam can scan at thousands of degrees per second, fast enough to irradiate and track many individual targets, and still run a wide-ranging search periodically. By simply turning some of the antennas on or off, the beam can be spread for searching, narrowed for tracking, or even split into two or more virtual radars. However, the beam cannot be effectively steered at small angles to the plane of the array, so for full coverage multiple arrays are required, typically disposed on the faces of a triangular pyramid (see picture). | |||
Phased array antennas are composed of evenly spaced similar antenna elements, such as aerials or rows of slotted waveguide. Each antenna element or group of antenna elements incorporates a discrete phase shift that produces a phase gradient across the array. For example, array elements producing a 5 degree phase shift for each wavelength across the array face will produce a beam pointed 5 degrees away from the centerline perpendicular to the array face. Signals travelling along that beam will be reinforced. Signals offset from that beam will be cancelled. The amount of reinforcement is ]. The amount of cancellation is side-lobe suppression.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://mit.edu/6.933/www/Fall2000/mode-s/sidelobe.html|title=Side-Lobe Suppression|publisher=MIT|access-date=11 September 2012|archive-date=31 March 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120331085410/http://mit.edu/6.933/www/Fall2000/mode-s/sidelobe.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
Phased array radars have been in use since the earliest years of radar in World War II (]), but electronic device limitations led to poor performance. Phased array radars were originally used for missile defence (see for example ]). They are the heart of the ship-borne ] and the ]. The massive redundancy associated with having a large number of array elements increases reliability at the expense of gradual performance degradation that occurs as individual phase elements fail. To a lesser extent, phased array radars have been used in ] ]. As of 2017, NOAA plans to implement a national network of multi-function phased array radars throughout the United States within 10 years, for meteorological studies and flight monitoring.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nssl.noaa.gov/projects/mpar/|title=Multi-function Phased Array Radar (MPAR) Project|author=National Severe Storms Laboratory|publisher=NOAA|access-date=8 February 2017|author-link=National Severe Storms Laboratory|archive-date=2 February 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170202073609/http://www.nssl.noaa.gov/projects/mpar/|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Phased array antennas can be built to conform to specific shapes, like missiles, infantry support vehicles, ships, and aircraft. | |||
As the price of electronics has fallen, phased array radars have become more common. Almost all modern military radar systems are based on phased arrays, where the small additional cost is offset by the improved reliability of a system with no moving parts. Traditional moving-antenna designs are still widely used in roles where cost is a significant factor such as air traffic surveillance and similar systems. | |||
Phased array radars are valued for use in aircraft since they can track multiple targets. The first aircraft to use a phased array radar was the ]. The first fighter aircraft to use phased array radar was the ]. The MiG-31M's SBI-16 ] ] radar was considered to be the world's most powerful fighter radar,{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} until the ] ] was introduced on the ]. | |||
Phased array radars have been in use since the earliest years of radar use in ], but limitations of the electronics led to fairly poor accuracy. Phased array radars were originally used for ] ]. They are the heart of the ship-borne ], and the ], and are increasingly used in other areas because the lack of moving parts makes them more reliable, and sometimes permits a much larger effective antenna, useful in fighter aircraft applications that offer only confined space for mechanical scanning. | |||
Phased-array ] or ] techniques, using an array of separate dishes that are phased into a single effective aperture, are not typical for radar applications, although they are widely used in ]. Because of the ], such multiple aperture arrays, when used in transmitters, result in narrow beams at the expense of reducing the total power transmitted to the target. In principle, such techniques could increase spatial resolution, but the lower power means that this is generally not effective. | |||
As the price of electronics has fallen, phased array radars have become more and more common. Almost all modern military radar systems are based on phased arrays, where the small additional cost is far offset by the improved reliability of a system with no moving parts. Traditional moving-antenna designs are still widely used in roles where cost is a significant factor such as air traffic surveillance, weather radars and similar systems. | |||
] by post-processing motion data from a single moving source, on the other hand, is widely used in space and ]s. | |||
Phased array radars are also valued for use in aircraft, since they can track multiple targets. The first aircraft to use a phased array radar is the B-1B Lancer. The first aircraft fighter to use phased array radar was the ]. The MiG-31M's SBI-16 ] phased array radar is considered to be the world's most powerful fighter radar . | |||
Phased-array ] or, ] techniques, using an array of separate dishes that are phased into a single effective aperture, are not typically used for radar applications, although they are widely used in ]. Because of the ], such arrays of multiple apertures, when used in transmitters, result in narrow beams at the expense of reducing the total power transmitted to the target. In principle, such techniques used could increase the spatial resolution, but the lower power means that this is generally not effective. Aperture synthesis by post-processing of motion data from a single moving source, on the other hand, is widely used in space and airborne radar systems (see ]). | |||
===Frequency bands=== | ===Frequency bands=== | ||
{{Main|Radio spectrum#IEEE}} | |||
The traditional band names originated as code-names during ] and are still in military and aviation use throughout the world in the 21st century. They have been adopted in the United States by the ], and internationally by the ]. Most countries have additional regulations to control which parts of each band are available for civilian or military use. | |||
Antennas generally have to be sized similar to the wavelength of the operational frequency, normally within an ]. This provides a strong incentive to use shorter wavelengths as this will result in smaller antennas. Shorter wavelengths also result in higher resolution due to diffraction, meaning the shaped reflector seen on most radars can also be made smaller for any desired beamwidth. | |||
Other users of the radio spectrum, such as the ] and electronic countermeasures (]) industries, have replaced the traditional military designations with their own systems. | |||
Opposing the move to smaller wavelengths are a number of practical issues. For one, the electronics needed to produce high power very short wavelengths were generally more complex and expensive than the electronics needed for longer wavelengths or did not exist at all. Another issue is that the ]'s effective aperture figure means that for any given antenna (or reflector) size will be more efficient at longer wavelengths. Additionally, shorter wavelengths may interact with molecules or raindrops in the air, scattering the signal. Very long wavelengths also have additional diffraction effects that make them suitable for ]s. For this reason, a wide variety of wavelengths are used in different roles. | |||
The traditional band names originated as code-names during World War II and are still in military and aviation use throughout the world. They have been adopted in the United States by the ] and internationally by the ]. Most countries have additional regulations to control which parts of each band are available for civilian or military use. | |||
Other users of the radio spectrum, such as the ] and ] industries, have replaced the traditional military designations with their own systems. | |||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|+ '''Radar frequency bands''' | |+ '''Radar frequency bands''' | ||
|- |
|- style="background:#ccc;" | ||
!Band name!!Frequency range!!Wavelength range!!Notes | !Band name!!Frequency range!!Wavelength range!!Notes | ||
|- | |- | ||
|]||3–30 ]||10–100 ]|| |
|]||3–30 ]||10–100 ]||Coastal radar systems, ] (OTH) radars; 'high frequency' | ||
|- | |||
|]||30–300 MHz||1–10 m||Very long range, ground penetrating; 'very high frequency'. Early radar systems generally operated in VHF as suitable electronics had already been developed for broadcast radio. Today this band is heavily congested and no longer suitable for radar due to interference. | |||
|- | |||
|P||< 300 MHz||> 1 m||'P' for 'previous', applied retrospectively to early radar systems; essentially HF + VHF. Often used for remote sensing because of good vegetation penetration. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|]||300–1000 MHz||0.3–1 m||Very long range (e.g. ]), ground penetrating, foliage penetrating; 'ultra high frequency'. Efficiently produced and received at very high energy levels, and also reduces the effects of ], making them useful in the missile detection role. | |||
|P||< 300 MHz||1 m+||'P' for 'previous', applied retrospectively to early radar systems | |||
|- | |- | ||
|]||1–2 ]||15–30 ]||Long range air traffic control and ]; 'L' for 'long'. Widely used for long range ]s as they combine good reception qualities with reasonable resolution. | |||
|]||30–330 MHz||0.9–6 m||Very long range, ground penetrating; 'very high frequency' | |||
|- | |- | ||
|]||2–4 GHz||7.5–15 cm||Moderate range surveillance, Terminal air traffic control, long-range weather, marine radar; 'S' for 'sentimetric', its code-name during WWII. Less efficient than L, but offering higher resolution, making them especially suitable for long-range ] tasks. | |||
|]||300–1000 MHz||0.3–1 m||Very long range (e.g. ]), ground penetrating, foliage penetrating; 'ultra high frequency' | |||
|- | |- | ||
|]||4–8 GHz||3.75–7.5 cm||Satellite transponders; a compromise (hence 'C') between X and S bands; weather; long range tracking | |||
|]||1–2 ]||15–30 ]||Long range ] and ]; 'L' for 'long' | |||
|- | |- | ||
|]||8–12 GHz||2.5–3.75 cm||] guidance, ], weather, medium-resolution mapping and ground surveillance; in the United States the narrow range 10.525 GHz ±25 MHz is used for ] radar; short-range tracking. Named X band because the frequency was a secret during WW2. Diffraction off raindrops during heavy rain limits the range in the detection role and makes this suitable only for short-range roles or those that deliberately detect rain. | |||
|]||2–4 GHz||7.5–15 cm||Terminal air traffic control, long-range weather, marine radar; 'S' for 'short' | |||
|- | |- | ||
|]|| |
||]||12–18 GHz||1.67–2.5 cm||High-resolution, also used for satellite transponders, frequency under K band (hence 'u') | ||
|- | |- | ||
|]||18–24 GHz||1.11–1.67 cm||From ] ''kurz'', meaning 'short'. Limited use due to absorption by ] at 22 GHz, so K<sub>u</sub> and K<sub>a</sub> on either side used instead for surveillance. K-band is used for detecting clouds by meteorologists, and by police for detecting speeding motorists. K-band radar guns operate at 24.150 ± 0.100 GHz. | |||
|]||8–12 GHz||2.5–3.75 cm||] guidance, ], weather, medium-resolution mapping and ground surveillance; in the ] the narrow range 10.525 GHz ±25 MHz is used for ] radar. Named X band because the frequency was a secret during WW2. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|]||24–40 GHz||0.75–1.11 cm||Mapping, short range, airport surveillance; frequency just above K band (hence 'a') Photo radar, used to trigger cameras which take pictures of license plates of cars running red lights, operates at 34.300 ± 0.100 GHz. | |||
||]||12–18 GHz||1.67–2.5 cm||high-resolution | |||
|- | |- | ||
|mm||40–300 GHz||1.0–7.5 ] ||], subdivided as below. Oxygen in the air is an extremely effective attenuator around 60 GHz, as are other molecules at other frequencies, leading to the so-called propagation window at 94 GHz. Even in this window the attenuation is higher than that due to water at 22.2 GHz. This makes these frequencies generally useful only for short-range highly specific radars, like ] avoidance systems for ]s or use in space where attenuation is not a problem. Multiple letters are assigned to these bands by different groups. These are from Baytron, a now defunct company that made test equipment. | |||
|]||18–24 GHz||1.11–1.67 cm||from ] ''kurz'', meaning 'short'; limited use due to absorption by ], so K<sub>u</sub> and K<sub>a</sub> were used instead for surveillance. K-band is used for detecting clouds by meteorologists, and by police for detecting speeding motorists. K-band radar guns operate at 24.150 ± 0.100 GHz. | |||
|- | |||
|]||24–40 GHz||0.75–1.11 cm||mapping, short range, airport surveillance; frequency just above K band (hence 'a') Photo radar, used to trigger cameras which take pictures of license plates of cars running red lights, operates at 34.300 ± 0.100 GHz. | |||
|- | |||
|mm||40–300 GHz||7.5 mm – 1 mm ||], subdivided as below. The frequency ranges depend on waveguide size. Multiple letters are assigned to these bands by different groups. These are from Baytron, a now defunct company that made test equipment. | |||
|- | |||
|]||40–60 GHz||7.5 mm – 5 mm || Used for Military communication. | |||
|- | |||
|]||50–75 GHz||6.0–4 mm || Very strongly absorbed by atmospheric oxygen, which resonates at 60 GHz. | |||
|- | |||
|E||60–90 GHz||6.0–3.33 mm | |||
|- | |- | ||
|]|| |
|]||40–75 GHz||4.0–7.5 mm || Very strongly absorbed by atmospheric oxygen, which resonates at 60 GHz. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|]|| |
|]||75–110 GHz||2.7–4.0 mm||Used as a visual sensor for experimental autonomous vehicles, high-resolution meteorological observation, and imaging. | ||
|} | |} | ||
=== |
===Modulators=== | ||
] act to provide the waveform of the RF-pulse. There are two different radar modulator designs: | |||
] act to provide the short pulses of power to the ], a special type of vacuum tube that converts DC (usually pulsed) into microwaves. This technology is known as ]. In this way, the transmitted pulse of RF radiation is kept to a defined, and usually, very short duration. Modulators consist of a high voltage pulse generator formed from an HV supply, a ], and a high voltage switch such as a ]. | |||
* High voltage switch for non-coherent keyed power-oscillators.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.radartutorial.eu//08.transmitters/Radar%20Modulator.en.html|title=Radar Modulator|work=radartutorial.eu|access-date=29 November 2015|archive-date=7 December 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151207181518/http://www.radartutorial.eu/08.transmitters/Radar%20Modulator.en.html|url-status=live}}</ref> These modulators consist of a high voltage pulse generator formed from a high voltage supply, a ], and a high voltage switch such as a ]. They generate short pulses of power to feed, e.g., the ], a special type of vacuum tube that converts DC (usually pulsed) into microwaves. This technology is known as ]. In this way, the transmitted pulse of RF radiation is kept to a defined and usually very short duration. | |||
* Hybrid mixers,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.radartutorial.eu//08.transmitters/Fully%20Coherent%20Radar.en.html|title=Fully Coherent Radar|work=radartutorial.eu|access-date=29 November 2015|archive-date=8 December 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208042044/http://www.radartutorial.eu//08.transmitters/Fully%20Coherent%20Radar.en.html|url-status=live}}</ref> fed by a waveform generator and an exciter for a complex but ] waveform. This waveform can be generated by low power/low-voltage input signals. In this case the radar transmitter must be a power-amplifier, e.g., a ] or a solid state transmitter. In this way, the transmitted pulse is intrapulse-modulated and the radar receiver must use ] techniques. | |||
===Coolant=== | |||
A ] may also be used as a modulator because it is an amplifier, so it can be modulated by its low power input signal. | |||
{{main|Coolant}} | |||
Coherent microwave amplifiers operating above 1,000 watts microwave output, like ] and ]s, require liquid coolant. The electron beam must contain 5 to 10 times more power than the microwave output, which can produce enough heat to generate plasma. This plasma flows from the collector toward the cathode. The same magnetic focusing that guides the electron beam forces the plasma into the path of the electron beam but flowing in the opposite direction. This introduces FM modulation which degrades Doppler performance. To prevent this, liquid coolant with minimum pressure and flow rate is required, and deionized water is normally used in most high power surface radar systems that use Doppler processing.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.cientificosaficionados.com/libros/CERN/vacio9-CERN.pdf | author = J.L. de Segovia | title = Physics of Outgassing | publisher = Instituto de Física Aplicada, CETEF "L. Torres Quevedo", CSIC | location = Madrid, Spain | access-date = 12 August 2012 | archive-date = 5 January 2012 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120105205714/http://cientificosaficionados.com/libros/CERN/vacio9-CERN.pdf | url-status = live }}</ref> | |||
] (] ]) was used in several military radars in the 1970s. However, it is ], leading to ] and formation of highly flammable alcohol. The loss of a U.S. Navy aircraft in 1978 was attributed to a silicate ester fire.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.dtic.mil/cgi-bin/GetTRDoc?AD=ADA250517&Location=U2&doc=GetTRDoc.pdf | author = Stropki, Michael A. | year = 1992 | title = Polyalphaolefins: A New Improved Cost Effective Aircraft Radar Coolant | publisher = Aeronautical Research Laboratory, Defense Science and Technology Organisation, Department of Defense | location = Melbourne, Australia | access-date = 18 March 2010 | archive-date = 5 June 2011 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110605100528/http://www.dtic.mil/cgi-bin/GetTRDoc?AD=ADA250517&Location=U2&doc=GetTRDoc.pdf | url-status = dead }}</ref> Coolanol is also expensive and toxic. The U.S. Navy has instituted a program named ] (P2) to eliminate or reduce the volume and toxicity of waste, air emissions, and effluent discharges. Because of this, Coolanol is used less often today. | |||
===Radar coolant=== | |||
'']'' and ] (poly-alpha olefin) are the two main coolants used to cool airborne radar equipment today.{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} | |||
== Regulations == | |||
Coolanol (silicate ester) was used in several military radars in the 1970s, for example the AN/APG-63 in the F-15. However, it is hydroscopic, leading to formation of highly flammable alcohol. The loss of a U.S. Navy aircraft in 1978 was attributed to a silicate ester fire. Coolanol is also expensive and toxic. | |||
The U.S. Navy has instituted a program named ] (P2) to reduce or eliminate the volume and toxicity of waste, air emissions, and effluent discharges. Because of this Coolanol is used less often today. | |||
''Radar'' (also: ''RADAR'') is defined by ''article 1.100'' of the ] (ITU) ] (RR) as:<ref>ITU Radio Regulations, Section IV. Radio Stations and Systems – Article 1.100, definition: ''radar / RADAR''</ref> | |||
PAO is a synthetic lubricant composition is a blend of a polyol ] admixed with effective amounts of an ], yellow metal pacifier and rust inhibitors. The polyol ester blend includes a major proportion of poly (neopentyl polyol) ester blend formed by reacting poly(]) partial esters with at least one C7 to C12 ] mixed with an ester formed by reacting a polyol having at least two hydroxyl groups and at least one C8-C10 carboxylic acid. Preferably, the acids are linear and avoid those which can cause odours during use. Effective additives include secondary arylamine antioxidants, ] derivative yellow metal pacifier and an ] derivative and substituted primary and secondary ] and/or diamine rust inhibitor. | |||
{{Blockquote|A ] based on the comparison of reference signals with radio signals reflected, or retransmitted, from the position to be determined. Each ''radiodetermination system'' shall be classified by the ''radiocommunication service'' in which it operates permanently or temporarily. Typical radar utilizations are ] and ], these might operate in the ] or the ].}} | |||
A synthetic coolant/lubricant composition, comprising an ester mixture of 50 to 80 weight percent of poly (neopentyl polyol) ester formed by reacting a poly (neopentyl polyol) partial ester and at least one linear monocarboxylic acid having from 6 to 12 carbon atoms, and 20 to 50 weight percent of a polyol ester formed by reacting a polyol having 5 to 8 carbon atoms and at least two hydroxyl groups with at least one linear monocarboxylic acid having from 7 to 12 carbon atoms, the weight percents based on the total weight of the composition. | |||
== Configurations == | |||
{{See also|Radar engineering details}} | |||
Radar come in a variety of configurations in the emitter, the receiver, the antenna, wavelength, scan strategies, etc. | |||
* ] | |||
==Radar configurations and types== | |||
* ] | |||
{{Main|Radar configurations and types}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
Radars configurations include ], ], ], ], etc.. depending on the types of hardware and ] used. It is used in aviation (Primary and ]), sea vessels, law enforcement, ], ], geophysical surveys, and biological research. | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
** ] | |||
* ] with ] | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
{{ |
{{Portal|Electronics|Geography}} | ||
{{Main listing|List of radar types}} | |||
{{nautical portal}} | |||
{{Main category}} | |||
* ] | |||
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;Definitions | ;Definitions | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
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;Application | |||
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;Hardware | ;Hardware | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
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* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
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* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
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;Similar detection and ranging methods | ;Similar detection and ranging methods | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
;Historical radars | ;Historical radars | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] and ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==Notes== | == Notes and references == | ||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist}} | ||
== |
== Bibliography == | ||
{{Further reading cleanup|date=November 2014}} | |||
===References=== | |||
* Barrett, Dick, "''''". The Radar Pages. (History and details of various British radar systems) | * Barrett, Dick, "''''". The Radar Pages. (History and details of various British radar systems) | ||
* Buderi, "''''". Privateline.com. (Anecdotal account of the carriage of the world's first high power cavity magnetron from Britain to the US during WW2.) | * Buderi, "''''". Privateline.com. (Anecdotal account of the carriage of the world's first high power cavity magnetron from Britain to the US during WW2.) | ||
* Ekco Radar The secret development of British radar. | * Ekco Radar {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051212132004/http://www.ekco-radar.co.uk/ |date=12 December 2005 }} The secret development of British radar. | ||
* ES310 |
* ES310 | ||
* Hollmann, Martin, "''''". . | * Hollmann, Martin, "''''". . | ||
* Penley, Bill, and Jonathan Penley, "'' |
* Penley, Bill, and Jonathan Penley, "''—an Introduction''". 2002. | ||
* Pub 1310 ''Radar Navigation and Maneuvering Board Manual'', National Imagery and Mapping Agency, Bethesda, MD 2001 (US govt publication '...intended to be used primarily as a manual of instruction in navigation schools and by naval and merchant marine personnel.') | * Pub 1310 ''Radar Navigation and Maneuvering Board Manual'', National Imagery and Mapping Agency, Bethesda, MD 2001 (US govt publication '...intended to be used primarily as a manual of instruction in navigation schools and by naval and merchant marine personnel.') | ||
* Wesley Stout, 1946 {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200728115410/http://imperialclub.com/Yr/1945/46Radar/Cover.htm |date=28 July 2020 }} Early development and production by Chrysler Corp. during WWII. | |||
* Swords, Seán S., "Technical History of the Beginnings of Radar", ''] History of Technology Series'', Vol. 6, London: Peter Peregrinus, 1986 | |||
== |
=== General === | ||
* |
* {{cite book| author = Reg Batt| title = The radar army: winning the war of the airwaves| year = 1991| publisher = R. Hale| isbn = 978-0-7090-4508-3 }} | ||
* |
* {{cite book| author = E.G. Bowen| title = Radar Days| date = 1 January 1998| publisher = Taylor & Francis| isbn = 978-0-7503-0586-0 }} | ||
* |
* {{cite book| author = Michael Bragg| title = RDF1: The Location of Aircraft by Radio Methods 1935–1945| date = 1 May 2002| publisher = Twayne Publishers| isbn = 978-0-9531544-0-1 }} | ||
* |
* {{cite book| author = Louis Brown| title = A radar history of World War II: technical and military imperatives| year = 1999| publisher = Taylor & Francis| isbn = 978-0-7503-0659-1 }} | ||
* |
* {{cite book| author = Robert Buderi| title = The invention that changed the world: how a small group of radar pioneers won the Second World War and launched a technological revolution| year = 1996| publisher = Simon & Schuster| isbn = 978-0-684-81021-8 }} | ||
* Burch, David F., ''Radar For Mariners'', McGraw Hill, 2005, ISBN |
* Burch, David F., ''Radar For Mariners'', McGraw Hill, 2005, {{ISBN|978-0-07-139867-1}}. | ||
* {{cite book| author = Ian Goult| title = Secret Location: A witness to the Birth of Radar and its Postwar Influence| year = 2011| publisher = History Press | isbn = 978-0-7524-5776-5 }} | |||
* Hall, P.S., T.K. Garland-Collins, R.S. Picton and R.G. Lee, ''Radar'', Brassey's (UK) Ltd., 1991, Land Warfare Series: Vol 9, ISBN 0-08-037711-4. | |||
* {{cite book| author = Peter S. Hall| title = Radar| date = March 1991| publisher = Potomac Books Inc| isbn = 978-0-08-037711-7 }} | |||
* Howse, Derek, ''Radar At Sea The Royal Navy in World War 2'', Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, Maryland, USA, 1993, ISBN 1-55750-704-X | |||
* {{cite book| author = Derek Howse|author2=Naval Radar Trust | title = Radar at sea: the royal Navy in World War 2| date = February 1993| publisher = Naval Institute Press| isbn = 978-1-55750-704-4 }} | |||
* Jones, R.V., ''Most Secret War'', ISBN 1-85326-699-X. R.V. Jones' account of his part in British Scientific Intelligence between 1939 and 1945, working to anticipate the German's radar, radio navigation and V1/V2 developments. | |||
* {{cite book| author = R.V. Jones| title = Most Secret War| date = August 1998| publisher = Wordsworth Editions Ltd| isbn = 978-1-85326-699-7 }} | |||
* Kaiser, Gerald, Chapter 10 in "A Friendly Guide to Wavelets", Birkhauser, Boston, 1994. | * Kaiser, Gerald, Chapter 10 in "A Friendly Guide to Wavelets", Birkhauser, Boston, 1994. | ||
* |
* {{cite book|author=Colin Latham|author2=Anne Stobbs|title=Radar: A Wartime Miracle|date=January 1997|publisher=Sutton Pub Ltd|isbn=978-0-7509-1643-1}} | ||
* Le Chevalier |
* {{cite book| author = François Le Chevalier| title = Principles of radar and sonar signal processing| year = 2002| publisher = Artech House Publishers| isbn = 978-1-58053-338-6 }} | ||
* |
* {{cite book| author = David Pritchard| title = The radar war: Germany's pioneering achievement 1904-45| date = August 1989| publisher = Harpercollins| isbn = 978-1-85260-246-8 }} | ||
* |
* {{cite book| author = Merrill Ivan Skolnik| title = Introduction to radar systems| date = 1 December 1980| publisher = McGraw-Hill| isbn = 978-0-07-066572-9 }} | ||
* {{cite book| author = Merrill Ivan Skolnik| title = Radar handbook| year = 1990| publisher = McGraw-Hill Professional| isbn = 978-0-07-057913-2 }} | |||
* Skolnik, Merrill I., ''Radar Handbook''. ISBN 0-07-057913-X widely used in the ] since the 1970s. New 3rd Edition, February 2008, ISBN 0-07-148547-3; 978-0-07-148547-0 | |||
* {{cite book| author = George W. Stimson| title = Introduction to airborne radar| year = 1998| publisher = SciTech Publishing| isbn = 978-1-891121-01-2 }} | |||
* Stimson, George W., ''Introduction to Airborne Radar'', SciTech Publishing (2nd edition, 1998), ISBN 1-891121-01-4. Written for the non-specialist. The first half of the book on radar fundamentals is also applicable to ground- and sea-based radar. | |||
* Younghusband, Eileen., ''Not an Ordinary Life. How Changing Times Brought Historical Events into my Life'', Cardiff Centre for Lifelong Learning, Cardiff, 2009., ISBN |
* Younghusband, Eileen., ''Not an Ordinary Life. How Changing Times Brought Historical Events into my Life'', Cardiff Centre for Lifelong Learning, Cardiff, 2009., {{ISBN|978-0-9561156-9-0}} (Pages 36–67 contain the experiences of a WAAF radar plotter in WWII.) | ||
* Younghusband, Eileen. ''One Woman's War''. Cardiff. Candy Jar Books. 2011. {{ISBN|978-0-9566826-2-8}} | |||
* Zimmerman, David., ''Britain's Shield Radar and the Defeat of the Luftwaffe'', Sutton Publishing Ltd, Stroud, 2001, ISBN 0-7509-1799-7 | |||
* {{cite book| author = David Zimmerman| title = Britain's shield: radar and the defeat of the Luftwaffe| date = February 2001| publisher = Sutton Pub Ltd| isbn = 978-0-7509-1799-5 }} | |||
===Technical reading=== | |||
* {{cite book|editor1=M I. Skolnik |url=http://www.geo.uzh.ch/microsite/rsl-documents/research/SARlab/GMTILiterature/PDF/Skolnik90.pdf |isbn=0-07-057913-X | |||
|title=Radar Handbook |publisher=McGraw-Hill |year=1970}} | |||
* {{cite book|author1=Nadav Levanon |author2= Eli Mozeson |title=Radar signals |publisher=John Wiley & Sons, Inc. |year=2004 |isbn=9780471473787}} | |||
* {{cite book|author1=Hao He |author2=] |author3=] |url=http://www.sal.ufl.edu/book/ |title=Waveform design for active sensing systems: a computational approach |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2012 |isbn=978-1-107-01969-0}} | |||
* {{cite book|author1=Solomon W. Golomb |author2=Guang Gong |author2-link=Guang Gong|url=http://www.cambridge.org/us/academic/subjects/computer-science/cryptography-cryptology-and-coding/signal-design-good-correlation-wireless-communication-cryptography-and-radar |title=Signal design for good correlation: for wireless communication, cryptography, and radar |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2005 |isbn=978-0521821049}} | |||
* {{cite book|author1=M. Soltanalian |url=http://theses.eurasip.org/theses/573/signal-design-for-active-sensing-and/download/ |title=Signal Design for Active Sensing and Communications |work=Uppsala Dissertations from the Faculty of Science and Technology |publisher=Elanders Sverige AB |year=2014 |isbn=978-91-554-9017-1}} | |||
* {{cite book|editor1=Fulvio Gini |editor2=Antonio De Maio |editor3=Lee Patton |title=Waveform design and diversity for advanced radar systems|location=London|publisher=The Institution of Engineering and Technology |year=2012 |isbn=978-1849192651}} | |||
* {{cite conference|author1=E. Fishler |author2=A. Haimovich |author3=R. Blum |author4=D. Chizhik |author5=L. Cimini |author6=R. Valenzuela |title=MIMO radar: an idea whose time has come |conference=IEEE Radar Conference |year=2004}} | |||
* {{cite journal|author1=Mark R. Bell |title=Information theory and radar waveform design. |journal=IEEE Transactions on Information Theory |volume=39 |issue=5 |year=1993 |pages=1578–1597|doi=10.1109/18.259642 }} | |||
* {{cite journal|author1=Robert Calderbank |author2=S. Howard |author3=Bill Moran |title=Waveform diversity in radar signal processing |journal=IEEE Signal Processing Magazine |volume=26 |issue=1 |year=2009 |pages=32–41|doi=10.1109/MSP.2008.930414 |bibcode=2009ISPM...26...32C |s2cid=16437755 }} | |||
* {{cite book|author1=Mark A. Richards |author2=James A. Scheer |author3=William A. Holm |title=Principles of Modern Radar: Basic Principles |publisher=SciTech Publishing |year=2010 |isbn=978-1891121-52-4}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 15:45, 8 January 2025
Object detection system using radio waves For other uses, see Radar (disambiguation).Long-range radar antenna, used to track space objects and ballistic missilesRadar of the type used for detection of aircraft. It rotates steadily, sweeping the airspace with a narrow beam.
Radar is a system that uses radio waves to determine the distance (ranging), direction (azimuth and elevation angles), and radial velocity of objects relative to the site. It is a radiodetermination method used to detect and track aircraft, ships, spacecraft, guided missiles, motor vehicles, map weather formations, and terrain.
A radar system consists of a transmitter producing electromagnetic waves in the radio or microwaves domain, a transmitting antenna, a receiving antenna (often the same antenna is used for transmitting and receiving) and a receiver and processor to determine properties of the objects. Radio waves (pulsed or continuous) from the transmitter reflect off the objects and return to the receiver, giving information about the objects' locations and speeds.
Radar was developed secretly for military use by several countries in the period before and during World War II. A key development was the cavity magnetron in the United Kingdom, which allowed the creation of relatively small systems with sub-meter resolution. The term RADAR was coined in 1940 by the United States Navy as an acronym for "radio detection and ranging". The term radar has since entered English and other languages as an anacronym, a common noun, losing all capitalization.
The modern uses of radar are highly diverse, including air and terrestrial traffic control, radar astronomy, air-defense systems, anti-missile systems, marine radars to locate landmarks and other ships, aircraft anti-collision systems, ocean surveillance systems, outer space surveillance and rendezvous systems, meteorological precipitation monitoring, radar remote sensing, altimetry and flight control systems, guided missile target locating systems, self-driving cars, and ground-penetrating radar for geological observations. Modern high tech radar systems use digital signal processing and machine learning and are capable of extracting useful information from very high noise levels.
Other systems which are similar to radar make use of other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum. One example is lidar, which uses predominantly infrared light from lasers rather than radio waves. With the emergence of driverless vehicles, radar is expected to assist the automated platform to monitor its environment, thus preventing unwanted incidents.
History
Main article: History of radarFirst experiments
As early as 1886, German physicist Heinrich Hertz showed that radio waves could be reflected from solid objects. In 1895, Alexander Popov, a physics instructor at the Imperial Russian Navy school in Kronstadt, developed an apparatus using a coherer tube for detecting distant lightning strikes. The next year, he added a spark-gap transmitter. In 1897, while testing this equipment for communicating between two ships in the Baltic Sea, he took note of an interference beat caused by the passage of a third vessel. In his report, Popov wrote that this phenomenon might be used for detecting objects, but he did nothing more with this observation.
The German inventor Christian Hülsmeyer was the first to use radio waves to detect "the presence of distant metallic objects". In 1904, he demonstrated the feasibility of detecting a ship in dense fog, but not its distance from the transmitter. He obtained a patent for his detection device in April 1904 and later a patent for a related amendment for estimating the distance to the ship. He also obtained a British patent on 23 September 1904 for a full radar system, that he called a telemobiloscope. It operated on a 50 cm wavelength and the pulsed radar signal was created via a spark-gap. His system already used the classic antenna setup of horn antenna with parabolic reflector and was presented to German military officials in practical tests in Cologne and Rotterdam harbour but was rejected.
In 1915, Robert Watson-Watt used radio technology to provide advance warning of thunderstorms to airmen and during the 1920s went on to lead the U.K. research establishment to make many advances using radio techniques, including the probing of the ionosphere and the detection of lightning at long distances. Through his lightning experiments, Watson-Watt became an expert on the use of radio direction finding before turning his inquiry to shortwave transmission. Requiring a suitable receiver for such studies, he told the "new boy" Arnold Frederic Wilkins to conduct an extensive review of available shortwave units. Wilkins would select a General Post Office model after noting its manual's description of a "fading" effect (the common term for interference at the time) when aircraft flew overhead.
By placing a transmitter and receiver on opposite sides of the Potomac River in 1922, U.S. Navy researchers A. Hoyt Taylor and Leo C. Young discovered that ships passing through the beam path caused the received signal to fade in and out. Taylor submitted a report, suggesting that this phenomenon might be used to detect the presence of ships in low visibility, but the Navy did not immediately continue the work. Eight years later, Lawrence A. Hyland at the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) observed similar fading effects from passing aircraft; this revelation led to a patent application as well as a proposal for further intensive research on radio-echo signals from moving targets to take place at NRL, where Taylor and Young were based at the time.
Similarly, in the UK, L. S. Alder took out a secret provisional patent for Naval radar in 1928. W.A.S. Butement and P. E. Pollard developed a breadboard test unit, operating at 50 cm (600 MHz) and using pulsed modulation which gave successful laboratory results. In January 1931, a writeup on the apparatus was entered in the Inventions Book maintained by the Royal Engineers. This is the first official record in Great Britain of the technology that was used in coastal defence and was incorporated into Chain Home as Chain Home (low).
Before World War II
Before the Second World War, researchers in the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, the Soviet Union, and the United States, independently and in great secrecy, developed technologies that led to the modern version of radar. Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and South Africa followed prewar Great Britain's radar development, Hungary and Sweden generated its radar technology during the war.
In France in 1934, following systematic studies on the split-anode magnetron, the research branch of the Compagnie générale de la télégraphie sans fil (CSF) headed by Maurice Ponte with Henri Gutton, Sylvain Berline and M. Hugon, began developing an obstacle-locating radio apparatus, aspects of which were installed on the ocean liner Normandie in 1935.
During the same period, Soviet military engineer P.K. Oshchepkov, in collaboration with the Leningrad Electrotechnical Institute, produced an experimental apparatus, RAPID, capable of detecting an aircraft within 3 km of a receiver. The Soviets produced their first mass production radars RUS-1 and RUS-2 Redut in 1939 but further development was slowed following the arrest of Oshchepkov and his subsequent gulag sentence. In total, only 607 Redut stations were produced during the war. The first Russian airborne radar, Gneiss-2, entered into service in June 1943 on Pe-2 dive bombers. More than 230 Gneiss-2 stations were produced by the end of 1944. The French and Soviet systems, however, featured continuous-wave operation that did not provide the full performance ultimately synonymous with modern radar systems.
Full radar evolved as a pulsed system, and the first such elementary apparatus was demonstrated in December 1934 by the American Robert M. Page, working at the Naval Research Laboratory. The following year, the United States Army successfully tested a primitive surface-to-surface radar to aim coastal battery searchlights at night. This design was followed by a pulsed system demonstrated in May 1935 by Rudolf Kühnhold and the firm GEMA [de] in Germany and then another in June 1935 by an Air Ministry team led by Robert Watson-Watt in Great Britain.
In 1935, Watson-Watt was asked to judge recent reports of a German radio-based death ray and turned the request over to Wilkins. Wilkins returned a set of calculations demonstrating the system was basically impossible. When Watson-Watt then asked what such a system might do, Wilkins recalled the earlier report about aircraft causing radio interference. This revelation led to the Daventry Experiment of 26 February 1935, using a powerful BBC shortwave transmitter as the source and their GPO receiver setup in a field while a bomber flew around the site. When the plane was clearly detected, Hugh Dowding, the Air Member for Supply and Research, was very impressed with their system's potential and funds were immediately provided for further operational development. Watson-Watt's team patented the device in patent GB593017.
Development of radar greatly expanded on 1 September 1936, when Watson-Watt became superintendent of a new establishment under the British Air Ministry, Bawdsey Research Station located in Bawdsey Manor, near Felixstowe, Suffolk. Work there resulted in the design and installation of aircraft detection and tracking stations called "Chain Home" along the East and South coasts of England in time for the outbreak of World War II in 1939. This system provided the vital advance information that helped the Royal Air Force win the Battle of Britain; without it, significant numbers of fighter aircraft, which Great Britain did not have available, would always have needed to be in the air to respond quickly. The radar formed part of the "Dowding system" for collecting reports of enemy aircraft and coordinating the response.
Given all required funding and development support, the team produced working radar systems in 1935 and began deployment. By 1936, the first five Chain Home (CH) systems were operational and by 1940 stretched across the entire UK including Northern Ireland. Even by standards of the era, CH was crude; instead of broadcasting and receiving from an aimed antenna, CH broadcast a signal floodlighting the entire area in front of it, and then used one of Watson-Watt's own radio direction finders to determine the direction of the returned echoes. This fact meant CH transmitters had to be much more powerful and have better antennas than competing systems but allowed its rapid introduction using existing technologies.
During World War II
Main article: Radar in World War IIA key development was the cavity magnetron in the UK, which allowed the creation of relatively small systems with sub-meter resolution. Britain shared the technology with the U.S. during the 1940 Tizard Mission.
In April 1940, Popular Science showed an example of a radar unit using the Watson-Watt patent in an article on air defence. Also, in late 1941 Popular Mechanics had an article in which a U.S. scientist speculated about the British early warning system on the English east coast and came close to what it was and how it worked. Watson-Watt was sent to the U.S. in 1941 to advise on air defense after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. Alfred Lee Loomis organized the secret MIT Radiation Laboratory at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts which developed microwave radar technology in the years 1941–45. Later, in 1943, Page greatly improved radar with the monopulse technique that was used for many years in most radar applications.
The war precipitated research to find better resolution, more portability, and more features for radar, including small, lightweight sets to equip night fighters (aircraft interception radar) and maritime patrol aircraft (air-to-surface-vessel radar), and complementary navigation systems like Oboe used by the RAF's Pathfinder.
Applications
The information provided by radar includes the bearing and range (and therefore position) of the object from the radar scanner. It is thus used in many different fields where the need for such positioning is crucial. The first use of radar was for military purposes: to locate air, ground and sea targets. This evolved in the civilian field into applications for aircraft, ships, and automobiles.
In aviation, aircraft can be equipped with radar devices that warn of aircraft or other obstacles in or approaching their path, display weather information, and give accurate altitude readings. The first commercial device fitted to aircraft was a 1938 Bell Lab unit on some United Air Lines aircraft. Aircraft can land in fog at airports equipped with radar-assisted ground-controlled approach systems in which the plane's position is observed on precision approach radar screens by operators who thereby give radio landing instructions to the pilot, maintaining the aircraft on a defined approach path to the runway. Military fighter aircraft are usually fitted with air-to-air targeting radars, to detect and target enemy aircraft. In addition, larger specialized military aircraft carry powerful airborne radars to observe air traffic over a wide region and direct fighter aircraft towards targets.
Marine radars are used to measure the bearing and distance of ships to prevent collision with other ships, to navigate, and to fix their position at sea when within range of shore or other fixed references such as islands, buoys, and lightships. In port or in harbour, vessel traffic service radar systems are used to monitor and regulate ship movements in busy waters.
Meteorologists use radar to monitor precipitation and wind. It has become the primary tool for short-term weather forecasting and watching for severe weather such as thunderstorms, tornadoes, winter storms, precipitation types, etc. Geologists use specialized ground-penetrating radars to map the composition of Earth's crust. Police forces use radar guns to monitor vehicle speeds on the roads. Automotive radars are used for adaptive cruise control and emergency breaking on vehicles by ignoring stationary roadside objects that could cause incorrect brake application and instead measuring moving objects to prevent collision with other vehicles. As part of Intelligent Transport Systems, fixed-position stopped vehicle detection (SVD) radars are mounted on the roadside to detect stranded vehicles, obstructions and debris by inverting the automotive radar approach and ignoring moving objects. Smaller radar systems are used to detect human movement. Examples are breathing pattern detection for sleep monitoring and hand and finger gesture detection for computer interaction. Automatic door opening, light activation and intruder sensing are also common.
Principles
Radar signal
Further information: Radar signal characteristicsA radar system has a transmitter that emits radio waves known as radar signals in predetermined directions. When these signals contact an object they are usually reflected or scattered in many directions, although some of them will be absorbed and penetrate into the target. Radar signals are reflected especially well by materials of considerable electrical conductivity—such as most metals, seawater, and wet ground. This makes the use of radar altimeters possible in certain cases. The radar signals that are reflected back towards the radar receiver are the desirable ones that make radar detection work. If the object is moving either toward or away from the transmitter, there will be a slight change in the frequency of the radio waves due to the Doppler effect.
Radar receivers are usually, but not always, in the same location as the transmitter. The reflected radar signals captured by the receiving antenna are usually very weak. They can be strengthened by electronic amplifiers. More sophisticated methods of signal processing are also used in order to recover useful radar signals.
The weak absorption of radio waves by the medium through which they pass is what enables radar sets to detect objects at relatively long ranges—ranges at which other electromagnetic wavelengths, such as visible light, infrared light, and ultraviolet light, are too strongly attenuated. Weather phenomena, such as fog, clouds, rain, falling snow, and sleet, that block visible light are usually transparent to radio waves. Certain radio frequencies that are absorbed or scattered by water vapour, raindrops, or atmospheric gases (especially oxygen) are avoided when designing radars, except when their detection is intended.
Illumination
Radar relies on its own transmissions rather than light from the Sun or the Moon, or from electromagnetic waves emitted by the target objects themselves, such as infrared radiation (heat). This process of directing artificial radio waves towards objects is called illumination, although radio waves are invisible to the human eye as well as optical cameras.
Reflection
Main article: Reflection (physics)If electromagnetic waves travelling through one material meet another material, having a different dielectric constant or diamagnetic constant from the first, the waves will reflect or scatter from the boundary between the materials. This means that a solid object in air or in a vacuum, or a significant change in atomic density between the object and what is surrounding it, will usually scatter radar (radio) waves from its surface. This is particularly true for electrically conductive materials such as metal and carbon fibre, making radar well-suited to the detection of aircraft and ships. Radar absorbing material, containing resistive and sometimes magnetic substances, is used on military vehicles to reduce radar reflection. This is the radio equivalent of painting something a dark colour so that it cannot be seen by the eye at night.
Radar waves scatter in a variety of ways depending on the size (wavelength) of the radio wave and the shape of the target. If the wavelength is much shorter than the target's size, the wave will bounce off in a way similar to the way light is reflected by a mirror. If the wavelength is much longer than the size of the target, the target may not be visible because of poor reflection. Low-frequency radar technology is dependent on resonances for detection, but not identification, of targets. This is described by Rayleigh scattering, an effect that creates Earth's blue sky and red sunsets. When the two length scales are comparable, there may be resonances. Early radars used very long wavelengths that were larger than the targets and thus received a vague signal, whereas many modern systems use shorter wavelengths (a few centimetres or less) that can image objects as small as a loaf of bread.
Short radio waves reflect from curves and corners in a way similar to glint from a rounded piece of glass. The most reflective targets for short wavelengths have 90° angles between the reflective surfaces. A corner reflector consists of three flat surfaces meeting like the inside corner of a cube. The structure will reflect waves entering its opening directly back to the source. They are commonly used as radar reflectors to make otherwise difficult-to-detect objects easier to detect. Corner reflectors on boats, for example, make them more detectable to avoid collision or during a rescue. For similar reasons, objects intended to avoid detection will not have inside corners or surfaces and edges perpendicular to likely detection directions, which leads to "odd" looking stealth aircraft. These precautions do not totally eliminate reflection because of diffraction, especially at longer wavelengths. Half wavelength long wires or strips of conducting material, such as chaff, are very reflective but do not direct the scattered energy back toward the source. The extent to which an object reflects or scatters radio waves is called its radar cross-section.
Radar range equation
The power Pr returning to the receiving antenna is given by the equation:
where
- Pt = transmitter power
- Gt = gain of the transmitting antenna
- Ar = effective aperture (area) of the receiving antenna; this can also be expressed as , where
- = transmitted wavelength
- Gr = gain of receiving antenna
- σ = radar cross section, or scattering coefficient, of the target
- F = pattern propagation factor
- Rt = distance from the transmitter to the target
- Rr = distance from the target to the receiver.
In the common case where the transmitter and the receiver are at the same location, Rt = Rr and the term Rt² Rr² can be replaced by R, where R is the range. This yields:
This shows that the received power declines as the fourth power of the range, which means that the received power from distant targets is relatively very small.
Additional filtering and pulse integration modifies the radar equation slightly for pulse-Doppler radar performance, which can be used to increase detection range and reduce transmit power.
The equation above with F = 1 is a simplification for transmission in a vacuum without interference. The propagation factor accounts for the effects of multipath and shadowing and depends on the details of the environment. In a real-world situation, pathloss effects are also considered.
Doppler effect
Main articles: Doppler radar and Pulse-Doppler radarFrequency shift is caused by motion that changes the number of wavelengths between the reflector and the radar. This can degrade or enhance radar performance depending upon how it affects the detection process. As an example, moving target indication can interact with Doppler to produce signal cancellation at certain radial velocities, which degrades performance.
Sea-based radar systems, semi-active radar homing, active radar homing, weather radar, military aircraft, and radar astronomy rely on the Doppler effect to enhance performance. This produces information about target velocity during the detection process. This also allows small objects to be detected in an environment containing much larger nearby slow moving objects.
Doppler shift depends upon whether the radar configuration is active or passive. Active radar transmits a signal that is reflected back to the receiver. Passive radar depends upon the object sending a signal to the receiver.
The Doppler frequency shift for active radar is as follows, where is Doppler frequency, is transmit frequency, is radial velocity, and is the speed of light:
- .
Passive radar is applicable to electronic countermeasures and radio astronomy as follows:
- .
Only the radial component of the velocity is relevant. When the reflector is moving at right angle to the radar beam, it has no relative velocity. Objects moving parallel to the radar beam produce the maximum Doppler frequency shift.
When the transmit frequency () is pulsed, using a pulse repeat frequency of , the resulting frequency spectrum will contain harmonic frequencies above and below with a distance of . As a result, the Doppler measurement is only non-ambiguous if the Doppler frequency shift is less than half of , called the Nyquist frequency, since the returned frequency otherwise cannot be distinguished from shifting of a harmonic frequency above or below, thus requiring:
Or when substituting with :
As an example, a Doppler weather radar with a pulse rate of 2 kHz and transmit frequency of 1 GHz can reliably measure weather speed up to at most 150 m/s (340 mph), thus cannot reliably determine radial velocity of aircraft moving 1,000 m/s (2,200 mph).
Polarization
Further information: Polarization (waves)In all electromagnetic radiation, the electric field is perpendicular to the direction of propagation, and the electric field direction is the polarization of the wave. For a transmitted radar signal, the polarization can be controlled to yield different effects. Radars use horizontal, vertical, linear, and circular polarization to detect different types of reflections. For example, circular polarization is used to minimize the interference caused by rain. Linear polarization returns usually indicate metal surfaces. Random polarization returns usually indicate a fractal surface, such as rocks or soil, and are used by navigation radars.
Limiting factors
Beam path and range
See also: Beam forming and Over-the-horizon radarA radar beam follows a linear path in vacuum but follows a somewhat curved path in atmosphere due to variation in the refractive index of air, which is called the radar horizon. Even when the beam is emitted parallel to the ground, the beam rises above the ground as the curvature of the Earth sinks below the horizon. Furthermore, the signal is attenuated by the medium the beam crosses, and the beam disperses.
The maximum range of conventional radar can be limited by a number of factors:
- Line of sight, which depends on the height above the ground. Without a direct line of sight, the path of the beam is blocked.
- The maximum non-ambiguous range, which is determined by the pulse repetition frequency. The maximum non-ambiguous range is the distance the pulse can travel to and return from before the next pulse is emitted.
- Radar sensitivity and the power of the return signal as computed in the radar equation. This component includes factors such as the environmental conditions and the size (or radar cross section) of the target.
Noise
Main articles: Noise (electronics) and Noise (radio)Signal noise is an internal source of random variations in the signal, which is generated by all electronic components.
Reflected signals decline rapidly as distance increases, so noise introduces a radar range limitation. The noise floor and signal-to-noise ratio are two different measures of performance that affect range performance. Reflectors that are too far away produce too little signal to exceed the noise floor and cannot be detected. Detection requires a signal that exceeds the noise floor by at least the signal-to-noise ratio.
Noise typically appears as random variations superimposed on the desired echo signal received in the radar receiver. The lower the power of the desired signal, the more difficult it is to discern it from the noise. The noise figure is a measure of the noise produced by a receiver compared to an ideal receiver, and this needs to be minimized.
Shot noise is produced by electrons in transit across a discontinuity, which occurs in all detectors. Shot noise is the dominant source in most receivers. There will also be flicker noise caused by electron transit through amplification devices, which is reduced using heterodyne amplification. Another reason for heterodyne processing is that for fixed fractional bandwidth, the instantaneous bandwidth increases linearly in frequency. This allows improved range resolution. The one notable exception to heterodyne (downconversion) radar systems is ultra-wideband radar. Here a single cycle, or transient wave, is used similar to UWB communications, see List of UWB channels.
Noise is also generated by external sources, most importantly the natural thermal radiation of the background surrounding the target of interest. In modern radar systems, the internal noise is typically about equal to or lower than the external noise. An exception is if the radar is aimed upwards at clear sky, where the scene is so "cold" that it generates very little thermal noise. The thermal noise is given by kB T B, where T is temperature, B is bandwidth (post matched filter) and kB is the Boltzmann constant. There is an appealing intuitive interpretation of this relationship in a radar. Matched filtering allows the entire energy received from a target to be compressed into a single bin (be it a range, Doppler, elevation, or azimuth bin). On the surface it appears that then within a fixed interval of time, perfect, error free, detection could be obtained. This is done by compressing all energy into an infinitesimal time slice. What limits this approach in the real world is that, while time is arbitrarily divisible, current is not. The quantum of electrical energy is an electron, and so the best that can be done is to match filter all energy into a single electron. Since the electron is moving at a certain temperature (Planck spectrum) this noise source cannot be further eroded. Ultimately, radar, like all macro-scale entities, is profoundly impacted by quantum theory.
Noise is random and target signals are not. Signal processing can take advantage of this phenomenon to reduce the noise floor using two strategies. The kind of signal integration used with moving target indication can improve noise up to for each stage. The signal can also be split among multiple filters for pulse-Doppler signal processing, which reduces the noise floor by the number of filters. These improvements depend upon coherence.
Interference
Main article: Interference (wave propagation)Radar systems must overcome unwanted signals in order to focus on the targets of interest. These unwanted signals may originate from internal and external sources, both passive and active. The ability of the radar system to overcome these unwanted signals defines its signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). SNR is defined as the ratio of the signal power to the noise power within the desired signal; it compares the level of a desired target signal to the level of background noise (atmospheric noise and noise generated within the receiver). The higher a system's SNR the better it is at discriminating actual targets from noise signals.
Clutter
Main article: Clutter (radar)Clutter refers to radio frequency (RF) echoes returned from targets which are uninteresting to radar operators. Such targets include man-made objects such as buildings and — intentionally — by radar countermeasures such as chaff. Such targets also include natural objects such as ground, sea, and — when not being tasked for meteorological purposes — precipitation, hail spike, dust storms, animals (especially birds), turbulence in the atmospheric circulation, and meteor trails. Radar clutter can also be caused by other atmospheric phenomena, such as disturbances in the ionosphere caused by geomagnetic storms or other space weather events. This phenomenon is especially apparent near the geomagnetic poles, where the action of the solar wind on the earth's magnetosphere produces convection patterns in the ionospheric plasma. Radar clutter can degrade the ability of over-the-horizon radar to detect targets.
Some clutter may also be caused by a long radar waveguide between the radar transceiver and the antenna. In a typical plan position indicator (PPI) radar with a rotating antenna, this will usually be seen as a "sun" or "sunburst" in the center of the display as the receiver responds to echoes from dust particles and misguided RF in the waveguide. Adjusting the timing between when the transmitter sends a pulse and when the receiver stage is enabled will generally reduce the sunburst without affecting the accuracy of the range since most sunburst is caused by a diffused transmit pulse reflected before it leaves the antenna. Clutter is considered a passive interference source since it only appears in response to radar signals sent by the radar.
Clutter is detected and neutralized in several ways. Clutter tends to appear static between radar scans; on subsequent scan echoes, desirable targets will appear to move, and all stationary echoes can be eliminated. Sea clutter can be reduced by using horizontal polarization, while rain is reduced with circular polarization (meteorological radars wish for the opposite effect, and therefore use linear polarization to detect precipitation). Other methods attempt to increase the signal-to-clutter ratio.
Clutter moves with the wind or is stationary. Two common strategies to improve measures of performance in a clutter environment are:
- Moving target indication, which integrates successive pulses
- Doppler processing, which uses filters to separate clutter from desirable signals
The most effective clutter reduction technique is pulse-Doppler radar. Doppler separates clutter from aircraft and spacecraft using a frequency spectrum, so individual signals can be separated from multiple reflectors located in the same volume using velocity differences. This requires a coherent transmitter. Another technique uses a moving target indicator that subtracts the received signal from two successive pulses using phase to reduce signals from slow-moving objects. This can be adapted for systems that lack a coherent transmitter, such as time-domain pulse-amplitude radar.
Constant false alarm rate, a form of automatic gain control (AGC), is a method that relies on clutter returns far outnumbering echoes from targets of interest. The receiver's gain is automatically adjusted to maintain a constant level of overall visible clutter. While this does not help detect targets masked by stronger surrounding clutter, it does help to distinguish strong target sources. In the past, radar AGC was electronically controlled and affected the gain of the entire radar receiver. As radars evolved, AGC became computer-software-controlled and affected the gain with greater granularity in specific detection cells.
Clutter may also originate from multipath echoes from valid targets caused by ground reflection, atmospheric ducting or ionospheric reflection/refraction (e.g., anomalous propagation). This clutter type is especially bothersome since it appears to move and behave like other normal (point) targets of interest. In a typical scenario, an aircraft echo is reflected from the ground below, appearing to the receiver as an identical target below the correct one. The radar may try to unify the targets, reporting the target at an incorrect height, or eliminating it on the basis of jitter or a physical impossibility. Terrain bounce jamming exploits this response by amplifying the radar signal and directing it downward. These problems can be overcome by incorporating a ground map of the radar's surroundings and eliminating all echoes which appear to originate below ground or above a certain height. Monopulse can be improved by altering the elevation algorithm used at low elevation. In newer air traffic control radar equipment, algorithms are used to identify the false targets by comparing the current pulse returns to those adjacent, as well as calculating return improbabilities.
Jamming
Main article: Radar jamming and deceptionRadar jamming refers to radio frequency signals originating from sources outside the radar, transmitting in the radar's frequency and thereby masking targets of interest. Jamming may be intentional, as with an electronic warfare tactic, or unintentional, as with friendly forces operating equipment that transmits using the same frequency range. Jamming is considered an active interference source, since it is initiated by elements outside the radar and in general unrelated to the radar signals.
Jamming is problematic to radar since the jamming signal only needs to travel one way (from the jammer to the radar receiver) whereas the radar echoes travel two ways (radar-target-radar) and are therefore significantly reduced in power by the time they return to the radar receiver in accordance with inverse-square law. Jammers therefore can be much less powerful than their jammed radars and still effectively mask targets along the line of sight from the jammer to the radar (mainlobe jamming). Jammers have an added effect of affecting radars along other lines of sight through the radar receiver's sidelobes (sidelobe jamming).
Mainlobe jamming can generally only be reduced by narrowing the mainlobe solid angle and cannot fully be eliminated when directly facing a jammer which uses the same frequency and polarization as the radar. Sidelobe jamming can be overcome by reducing receiving sidelobes in the radar antenna design and by using an omnidirectional antenna to detect and disregard non-mainlobe signals. Other anti-jamming techniques are frequency hopping and polarization.
Signal processing
Distance measurement
Transit time
Further information: Time of flightOne way to obtain a distance measurement (ranging) is based on the time-of-flight: transmit a short pulse of radio signal (electromagnetic radiation) and measure the time it takes for the reflection to return. The distance is one-half the round trip time multiplied by the speed of the signal. The factor of one-half comes from the fact that the signal has to travel to the object and back again. Since radio waves travel at the speed of light, accurate distance measurement requires high-speed electronics. In most cases, the receiver does not detect the return while the signal is being transmitted. Through the use of a duplexer, the radar switches between transmitting and receiving at a predetermined rate. A similar effect imposes a maximum range as well. In order to maximize range, longer times between pulses should be used, referred to as a pulse repetition time, or its reciprocal, pulse repetition frequency.
These two effects tend to be at odds with each other, and it is not easy to combine both good short range and good long range in a single radar. This is because the short pulses needed for a good minimum range broadcast have less total energy, making the returns much smaller and the target harder to detect. This could be offset by using more pulses, but this would shorten the maximum range. So each radar uses a particular type of signal. Long-range radars tend to use long pulses with long delays between them, and short range radars use smaller pulses with less time between them. As electronics have improved many radars now can change their pulse repetition frequency, thereby changing their range. The newest radars fire two pulses during one cell, one for short range (about 10 km (6.2 miles)) and a separate signal for longer ranges (about 100 km (62 miles)).
Distance may also be measured as a function of time. The radar mile is the time it takes for a radar pulse to travel one nautical mile, reflect off a target, and return to the radar antenna. Since a nautical mile is defined as 1,852 m, then dividing this distance by the speed of light (299,792,458 m/s), and then multiplying the result by 2 yields a result of 12.36 μs in duration.
Frequency modulation
Main article: Frequency modulationAnother form of distance measuring radar is based on frequency modulation. In these systems, the frequency of the transmitted signal is changed over time. Since the signal takes a finite time to travel to and from the target, the received signal is a different frequency than what the transmitter is broadcasting at the time the reflected signal arrives back at the radar. By comparing the frequency of the two signals the difference can be easily measured. This is easily accomplished with very high accuracy even in 1940s electronics. A further advantage is that the radar can operate effectively at relatively low frequencies. This was important in the early development of this type when high-frequency signal generation was difficult or expensive.
This technique can be used in continuous wave radar and is often found in aircraft radar altimeters. In these systems a "carrier" radar signal is frequency modulated in a predictable way, typically varying up and down with a sine wave or sawtooth pattern at audio frequencies. The signal is then sent out from one antenna and received on another, typically located on the bottom of the aircraft, and the signal can be continuously compared using a simple beat frequency modulator that produces an audio frequency tone from the returned signal and a portion of the transmitted signal.
The modulation index riding on the receive signal is proportional to the time delay between the radar and the reflector. The frequency shift becomes greater with greater time delay. The frequency shift is directly proportional to the distance travelled. That distance can be displayed on an instrument, and it may also be available via the transponder. This signal processing is similar to that used in speed detecting Doppler radar. Example systems using this approach are AZUSA, MISTRAM, and UDOP.
Terrestrial radar uses low-power FM signals that cover a larger frequency range. The multiple reflections are analyzed mathematically for pattern changes with multiple passes creating a computerized synthetic image. Doppler effects are used which allows slow moving objects to be detected as well as largely eliminating "noise" from the surfaces of bodies of water.
Pulse compression
Main article: Pulse compressionThe two techniques outlined above both have their disadvantages. The pulse timing technique has an inherent tradeoff in that the accuracy of the distance measurement is inversely related to the length of the pulse, while the energy, and thus direction range, is directly related. Increasing power for longer range while maintaining accuracy demands extremely high peak power, with 1960s early warning radars often operating in the tens of megawatts. The continuous wave methods spread this energy out in time and thus require much lower peak power compared to pulse techniques, but requires some method of allowing the sent and received signals to operate at the same time, often demanding two separate antennas.
The introduction of new electronics in the 1960s allowed the two techniques to be combined. It starts with a longer pulse that is also frequency modulated. Spreading the broadcast energy out in time means lower peak energies can be used, with modern examples typically on the order of tens of kilowatts. On reception, the signal is sent into a system that delays different frequencies by different times. The resulting output is a much shorter pulse that is suitable for accurate distance measurement, while also compressing the received energy into a much higher energy peak and thus reducing the signal-to-noise ratio. The technique is largely universal on modern large radars.
Speed measurement
Speed is the change in distance to an object with respect to time. Thus the existing system for measuring distance, combined with a memory capacity to see where the target last was, is enough to measure speed. At one time the memory consisted of a user making grease pencil marks on the radar screen and then calculating the speed using a slide rule. Modern radar systems perform the equivalent operation faster and more accurately using computers.
If the transmitter's output is coherent (phase synchronized), there is another effect that can be used to make almost instant speed measurements (no memory is required), known as the Doppler effect. Most modern radar systems use this principle into Doppler radar and pulse-Doppler radar systems (weather radar, military radar). The Doppler effect is only able to determine the relative speed of the target along the line of sight from the radar to the target. Any component of target velocity perpendicular to the line of sight cannot be determined by using the Doppler effect alone, but it can be determined by tracking the target's azimuth over time.
It is possible to make a Doppler radar without any pulsing, known as a continuous-wave radar (CW radar), by sending out a very pure signal of a known frequency. CW radar is ideal for determining the radial component of a target's velocity. CW radar is typically used by traffic enforcement to measure vehicle speed quickly and accurately where the range is not important.
When using a pulsed radar, the variation between the phase of successive returns gives the distance the target has moved between pulses, and thus its speed can be calculated. Other mathematical developments in radar signal processing include time-frequency analysis (Weyl Heisenberg or wavelet), as well as the chirplet transform which makes use of the change of frequency of returns from moving targets ("chirp").
Pulse-Doppler signal processing
Main article: Pulse-Doppler signal processingPulse-Doppler signal processing includes frequency filtering in the detection process. The space between each transmit pulse is divided into range cells or range gates. Each cell is filtered independently much like the process used by a spectrum analyzer to produce the display showing different frequencies. Each different distance produces a different spectrum. These spectra are used to perform the detection process. This is required to achieve acceptable performance in hostile environments involving weather, terrain, and electronic countermeasures.
The primary purpose is to measure both the amplitude and frequency of the aggregate reflected signal from multiple distances. This is used with weather radar to measure radial wind velocity and precipitation rate in each different volume of air. This is linked with computing systems to produce a real-time electronic weather map. Aircraft safety depends upon continuous access to accurate weather radar information that is used to prevent injuries and accidents. Weather radar uses a low PRF. Coherency requirements are not as strict as those for military systems because individual signals ordinarily do not need to be separated. Less sophisticated filtering is required, and range ambiguity processing is not normally needed with weather radar in comparison with military radar intended to track air vehicles.
The alternate purpose is "look-down/shoot-down" capability required to improve military air combat survivability. Pulse-Doppler is also used for ground based surveillance radar required to defend personnel and vehicles. Pulse-doppler signal processing increases the maximum detection distance using less radiation close to aircraft pilots, shipboard personnel, infantry, and artillery. Reflections from terrain, water, and weather produce signals much larger than aircraft and missiles, which allows fast moving vehicles to hide using nap-of-the-earth flying techniques and stealth technology to avoid detection until an attack vehicle is too close to destroy. Pulse-Doppler signal processing incorporates more sophisticated electronic filtering that safely eliminates this kind of weakness. This requires the use of medium pulse-repetition frequency with phase coherent hardware that has a large dynamic range. Military applications require medium PRF which prevents range from being determined directly, and range ambiguity resolution processing is required to identify the true range of all reflected signals. Radial movement is usually linked with Doppler frequency to produce a lock signal that cannot be produced by radar jamming signals. Pulse-Doppler signal processing also produces audible signals that can be used for threat identification.
Reduction of interference effects
Signal processing is employed in radar systems to reduce the radar interference effects. Signal processing techniques include moving target indication, Pulse-Doppler signal processing, moving target detection processors, correlation with secondary surveillance radar targets, space-time adaptive processing, and track-before-detect. Constant false alarm rate and digital terrain model processing are also used in clutter environments.
Plot and track extraction
Main articles: Radar tracker and Track algorithmA track algorithm is a radar performance enhancement strategy. Tracking algorithms provide the ability to predict the future position of multiple moving objects based on the history of the individual positions being reported by sensor systems.
Historical information is accumulated and used to predict future position for use with air traffic control, threat estimation, combat system doctrine, gun aiming, and missile guidance. Position data is accumulated by radar sensors over the span of a few minutes.
There are four common track algorithms:
- Nearest neighbour algorithm
- Probabilistic Data Association
- Multiple Hypothesis Tracking
- Interactive Multiple Model (IMM)
Radar video returns from aircraft can be subjected to a plot extraction process whereby spurious and interfering signals are discarded. A sequence of target returns can be monitored through a device known as a plot extractor.
The non-relevant real time returns can be removed from the displayed information and a single plot displayed. In some radar systems, or alternatively in the command and control system to which the radar is connected, a radar tracker is used to associate the sequence of plots belonging to individual targets and estimate the targets' headings and speeds.
Engineering
Main article: Radar engineering detailsA radar's components are:
- A transmitter that generates the radio signal with an oscillator such as a klystron or a magnetron and controls its duration by a modulator.
- A waveguide that links the transmitter and the antenna.
- A duplexer that serves as a switch between the antenna and the transmitter or the receiver for the signal when the antenna is used in both situations.
- A receiver. Knowing the shape of the desired received signal (a pulse), an optimal receiver can be designed using a matched filter.
- A display processor to produce signals for human readable output devices.
- An electronic section that controls all those devices and the antenna to perform the radar scan ordered by software.
- A link to end user devices and displays.
Antenna design
Main article: Antenna (radio)Radio signals broadcast from a single antenna will spread out in all directions, and likewise a single antenna will receive signals equally from all directions. This leaves the radar with the problem of deciding where the target object is located.
Early systems tended to use omnidirectional broadcast antennas, with directional receiver antennas which were pointed in various directions. For instance, the first system to be deployed, Chain Home, used two straight antennas at right angles for reception, each on a different display. The maximum return would be detected with an antenna at right angles to the target, and a minimum with the antenna pointed directly at it (end on). The operator could determine the direction to a target by rotating the antenna so one display showed a maximum while the other showed a minimum. One serious limitation with this type of solution is that the broadcast is sent out in all directions, so the amount of energy in the direction being examined is a small part of that transmitted. To get a reasonable amount of power on the "target", the transmitting aerial should also be directional.
Parabolic reflector
Main article: Parabolic antennaMore modern systems use a steerable parabolic "dish" to create a tight broadcast beam, typically using the same dish as the receiver. Such systems often combine two radar frequencies in the same antenna in order to allow automatic steering, or radar lock.
Parabolic reflectors can be either symmetric parabolas or spoiled parabolas: Symmetric parabolic antennas produce a narrow "pencil" beam in both the X and Y dimensions and consequently have a higher gain. The NEXRAD Pulse-Doppler weather radar uses a symmetric antenna to perform detailed volumetric scans of the atmosphere. Spoiled parabolic antennas produce a narrow beam in one dimension and a relatively wide beam in the other. This feature is useful if target detection over a wide range of angles is more important than target location in three dimensions. Most 2D surveillance radars use a spoiled parabolic antenna with a narrow azimuthal beamwidth and wide vertical beamwidth. This beam configuration allows the radar operator to detect an aircraft at a specific azimuth but at an indeterminate height. Conversely, so-called "nodder" height finding radars use a dish with a narrow vertical beamwidth and wide azimuthal beamwidth to detect an aircraft at a specific height but with low azimuthal precision.
Types of scan
- Primary Scan: A scanning technique where the main antenna aerial is moved to produce a scanning beam, examples include circular scan, sector scan, etc.
- Secondary Scan: A scanning technique where the antenna feed is moved to produce a scanning beam, examples include conical scan, unidirectional sector scan, lobe switching, etc.
- Palmer Scan: A scanning technique that produces a scanning beam by moving the main antenna and its feed. A Palmer Scan is a combination of a Primary Scan and a Secondary Scan.
- Conical scanning: The radar beam is rotated in a small circle around the "boresight" axis, which is pointed at the target.
Slotted waveguide
Main article: Slotted waveguideApplied similarly to the parabolic reflector, the slotted waveguide is moved mechanically to scan and is particularly suitable for non-tracking surface scan systems, where the vertical pattern may remain constant. Owing to its lower cost and less wind exposure, shipboard, airport surface, and harbour surveillance radars now use this approach in preference to a parabolic antenna.
Phased array
Main article: Phased arrayAnother method of steering is used in a phased array radar.
Phased array antennas are composed of evenly spaced similar antenna elements, such as aerials or rows of slotted waveguide. Each antenna element or group of antenna elements incorporates a discrete phase shift that produces a phase gradient across the array. For example, array elements producing a 5 degree phase shift for each wavelength across the array face will produce a beam pointed 5 degrees away from the centerline perpendicular to the array face. Signals travelling along that beam will be reinforced. Signals offset from that beam will be cancelled. The amount of reinforcement is antenna gain. The amount of cancellation is side-lobe suppression.
Phased array radars have been in use since the earliest years of radar in World War II (Mammut radar), but electronic device limitations led to poor performance. Phased array radars were originally used for missile defence (see for example Safeguard Program). They are the heart of the ship-borne Aegis Combat System and the Patriot Missile System. The massive redundancy associated with having a large number of array elements increases reliability at the expense of gradual performance degradation that occurs as individual phase elements fail. To a lesser extent, phased array radars have been used in weather surveillance. As of 2017, NOAA plans to implement a national network of multi-function phased array radars throughout the United States within 10 years, for meteorological studies and flight monitoring.
Phased array antennas can be built to conform to specific shapes, like missiles, infantry support vehicles, ships, and aircraft.
As the price of electronics has fallen, phased array radars have become more common. Almost all modern military radar systems are based on phased arrays, where the small additional cost is offset by the improved reliability of a system with no moving parts. Traditional moving-antenna designs are still widely used in roles where cost is a significant factor such as air traffic surveillance and similar systems.
Phased array radars are valued for use in aircraft since they can track multiple targets. The first aircraft to use a phased array radar was the B-1B Lancer. The first fighter aircraft to use phased array radar was the Mikoyan MiG-31. The MiG-31M's SBI-16 Zaslon passive electronically scanned array radar was considered to be the world's most powerful fighter radar, until the AN/APG-77 active electronically scanned array was introduced on the Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor.
Phased-array interferometry or aperture synthesis techniques, using an array of separate dishes that are phased into a single effective aperture, are not typical for radar applications, although they are widely used in radio astronomy. Because of the thinned array curse, such multiple aperture arrays, when used in transmitters, result in narrow beams at the expense of reducing the total power transmitted to the target. In principle, such techniques could increase spatial resolution, but the lower power means that this is generally not effective.
Aperture synthesis by post-processing motion data from a single moving source, on the other hand, is widely used in space and airborne radar systems.
Frequency bands
Main article: Radio spectrum § IEEEAntennas generally have to be sized similar to the wavelength of the operational frequency, normally within an order of magnitude. This provides a strong incentive to use shorter wavelengths as this will result in smaller antennas. Shorter wavelengths also result in higher resolution due to diffraction, meaning the shaped reflector seen on most radars can also be made smaller for any desired beamwidth.
Opposing the move to smaller wavelengths are a number of practical issues. For one, the electronics needed to produce high power very short wavelengths were generally more complex and expensive than the electronics needed for longer wavelengths or did not exist at all. Another issue is that the radar equation's effective aperture figure means that for any given antenna (or reflector) size will be more efficient at longer wavelengths. Additionally, shorter wavelengths may interact with molecules or raindrops in the air, scattering the signal. Very long wavelengths also have additional diffraction effects that make them suitable for over the horizon radars. For this reason, a wide variety of wavelengths are used in different roles.
The traditional band names originated as code-names during World War II and are still in military and aviation use throughout the world. They have been adopted in the United States by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and internationally by the International Telecommunication Union. Most countries have additional regulations to control which parts of each band are available for civilian or military use.
Other users of the radio spectrum, such as the broadcasting and electronic countermeasures industries, have replaced the traditional military designations with their own systems.
Band name | Frequency range | Wavelength range | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
HF | 3–30 MHz | 10–100 m | Coastal radar systems, over-the-horizon (OTH) radars; 'high frequency' |
VHF | 30–300 MHz | 1–10 m | Very long range, ground penetrating; 'very high frequency'. Early radar systems generally operated in VHF as suitable electronics had already been developed for broadcast radio. Today this band is heavily congested and no longer suitable for radar due to interference. |
P | < 300 MHz | > 1 m | 'P' for 'previous', applied retrospectively to early radar systems; essentially HF + VHF. Often used for remote sensing because of good vegetation penetration. |
UHF | 300–1000 MHz | 0.3–1 m | Very long range (e.g. ballistic missile early warning), ground penetrating, foliage penetrating; 'ultra high frequency'. Efficiently produced and received at very high energy levels, and also reduces the effects of nuclear blackout, making them useful in the missile detection role. |
L | 1–2 GHz | 15–30 cm | Long range air traffic control and surveillance; 'L' for 'long'. Widely used for long range early warning radars as they combine good reception qualities with reasonable resolution. |
S | 2–4 GHz | 7.5–15 cm | Moderate range surveillance, Terminal air traffic control, long-range weather, marine radar; 'S' for 'sentimetric', its code-name during WWII. Less efficient than L, but offering higher resolution, making them especially suitable for long-range ground controlled interception tasks. |
C | 4–8 GHz | 3.75–7.5 cm | Satellite transponders; a compromise (hence 'C') between X and S bands; weather; long range tracking |
X | 8–12 GHz | 2.5–3.75 cm | Missile guidance, marine radar, weather, medium-resolution mapping and ground surveillance; in the United States the narrow range 10.525 GHz ±25 MHz is used for airport radar; short-range tracking. Named X band because the frequency was a secret during WW2. Diffraction off raindrops during heavy rain limits the range in the detection role and makes this suitable only for short-range roles or those that deliberately detect rain. |
Ku | 12–18 GHz | 1.67–2.5 cm | High-resolution, also used for satellite transponders, frequency under K band (hence 'u') |
K | 18–24 GHz | 1.11–1.67 cm | From German kurz, meaning 'short'. Limited use due to absorption by water vapor at 22 GHz, so Ku and Ka on either side used instead for surveillance. K-band is used for detecting clouds by meteorologists, and by police for detecting speeding motorists. K-band radar guns operate at 24.150 ± 0.100 GHz. |
Ka | 24–40 GHz | 0.75–1.11 cm | Mapping, short range, airport surveillance; frequency just above K band (hence 'a') Photo radar, used to trigger cameras which take pictures of license plates of cars running red lights, operates at 34.300 ± 0.100 GHz. |
mm | 40–300 GHz | 1.0–7.5 mm | Millimetre band, subdivided as below. Oxygen in the air is an extremely effective attenuator around 60 GHz, as are other molecules at other frequencies, leading to the so-called propagation window at 94 GHz. Even in this window the attenuation is higher than that due to water at 22.2 GHz. This makes these frequencies generally useful only for short-range highly specific radars, like power line avoidance systems for helicopters or use in space where attenuation is not a problem. Multiple letters are assigned to these bands by different groups. These are from Baytron, a now defunct company that made test equipment. |
V | 40–75 GHz | 4.0–7.5 mm | Very strongly absorbed by atmospheric oxygen, which resonates at 60 GHz. |
W | 75–110 GHz | 2.7–4.0 mm | Used as a visual sensor for experimental autonomous vehicles, high-resolution meteorological observation, and imaging. |
Modulators
Modulators act to provide the waveform of the RF-pulse. There are two different radar modulator designs:
- High voltage switch for non-coherent keyed power-oscillators. These modulators consist of a high voltage pulse generator formed from a high voltage supply, a pulse forming network, and a high voltage switch such as a thyratron. They generate short pulses of power to feed, e.g., the magnetron, a special type of vacuum tube that converts DC (usually pulsed) into microwaves. This technology is known as pulsed power. In this way, the transmitted pulse of RF radiation is kept to a defined and usually very short duration.
- Hybrid mixers, fed by a waveform generator and an exciter for a complex but coherent waveform. This waveform can be generated by low power/low-voltage input signals. In this case the radar transmitter must be a power-amplifier, e.g., a klystron or a solid state transmitter. In this way, the transmitted pulse is intrapulse-modulated and the radar receiver must use pulse compression techniques.
Coolant
Main article: CoolantCoherent microwave amplifiers operating above 1,000 watts microwave output, like travelling wave tubes and klystrons, require liquid coolant. The electron beam must contain 5 to 10 times more power than the microwave output, which can produce enough heat to generate plasma. This plasma flows from the collector toward the cathode. The same magnetic focusing that guides the electron beam forces the plasma into the path of the electron beam but flowing in the opposite direction. This introduces FM modulation which degrades Doppler performance. To prevent this, liquid coolant with minimum pressure and flow rate is required, and deionized water is normally used in most high power surface radar systems that use Doppler processing.
Coolanol (silicate ester) was used in several military radars in the 1970s. However, it is hygroscopic, leading to hydrolysis and formation of highly flammable alcohol. The loss of a U.S. Navy aircraft in 1978 was attributed to a silicate ester fire. Coolanol is also expensive and toxic. The U.S. Navy has instituted a program named Pollution Prevention (P2) to eliminate or reduce the volume and toxicity of waste, air emissions, and effluent discharges. Because of this, Coolanol is used less often today.
Regulations
Radar (also: RADAR) is defined by article 1.100 of the International Telecommunication Union's (ITU) ITU Radio Regulations (RR) as:
A radiodetermination system based on the comparison of reference signals with radio signals reflected, or retransmitted, from the position to be determined. Each radiodetermination system shall be classified by the radiocommunication service in which it operates permanently or temporarily. Typical radar utilizations are primary radar and secondary radar, these might operate in the radiolocation service or the radiolocation-satellite service.
Configurations
Radar come in a variety of configurations in the emitter, the receiver, the antenna, wavelength, scan strategies, etc.
- Bistatic radar
- Continuous-wave radar
- Doppler radar
- Fm-cw radar
- Monopulse radar
- Passive radar
- Planar array radar
- Pulse-doppler
- Synthetic-aperture radar
- Over-the-horizon radar with chirp transmitter
See also
Main listing: List of radar types Main category: Radar- Terrain-following radar
- Radar imaging
- Radar navigation
- Inverse-square law
- Wave radar
- Radar signal characteristics
- Pulse doppler radar
- Mmwave sensing
- Acronyms and abbreviations in avionics
- Definitions
- Application
- Hardware
- Cavity magnetron
- Crossed-field amplifier
- Gallium arsenide
- Klystron
- Omniview technology
- Radar engineering details
- Radar tower
- Radio
- Travelling-wave tube
- Similar detection and ranging methods
- Historical radars
- List of radars
- Chain Home and Chain Home Low
- Würzburg radar
- Hohentwiel radar
- H2S radar
- SCR-270 radar
Notes and references
- ITU (2020). "Chapter I – Terminology and technical characteristics" (PDF). Radio Regulations. International Telecommunications Union (ITU). Retrieved 24 March 2024.
- Translation Bureau (2013). "Radar definition". Public Works and Government Services Canada. Archived from the original on 4 January 2014. Retrieved 8 November 2013.
- McGraw-Hill dictionary of scientific and technical terms / Daniel N. Lapedes, editor in chief. Lapedes, Daniel N. New York; Montreal : McGraw-Hill, 1976. , 1634, A26 p.
- "Radio Detection and Ranging". Nature. 152 (3857): 391–392. 2 October 1943. Bibcode:1943Natur.152..391.. doi:10.1038/152391b0.
- "Remote Sensing Core Curriculum: Radio Detection and Ranging (RADAR)". University of Minnesota. Archived from the original on 2 June 2021. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
- Duda, Jeffrey D. "History of Radar Meteorology" (PDF). Archived from the original on 2 March 2023. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
Note: the word radar is actually an acronym that stands for RAdio Detection and Ranging. It was officially coined by U.S. Navy Lieutenant Commanders Samuel M. Tucker and F.R. Furth in November 1940
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- Swords, S. S.; tech. History of the Beginnings of Radar, Peter Peregrinus, Ltd, 1986, pp. 71–74
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- GB 593017 Improvements in or relating to wireless systems
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It not only changed the course of the war by allowing us to develop airborne radar systems, it remains the key piece of technology that lies at the heart of your microwave oven today. The cavity magnetron's invention changed the world.
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Bibliography
This "Further reading" section may need cleanup. Please read the editing guide and help improve the section. (November 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
References
- Barrett, Dick, "All you ever wanted to know about British air defence radar". The Radar Pages. (History and details of various British radar systems)
- Buderi, "Telephone History: Radar History". Privateline.com. (Anecdotal account of the carriage of the world's first high power cavity magnetron from Britain to the US during WW2.)
- Ekco Radar WW2 Shadow Factory Archived 12 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine The secret development of British radar.
- ES310 "Introduction to Naval Weapons Engineering.". (Radar fundamentals section)
- Hollmann, Martin, "Radar Family Tree". Radar World.
- Penley, Bill, and Jonathan Penley, "Early Radar History—an Introduction". 2002.
- Pub 1310 Radar Navigation and Maneuvering Board Manual, National Imagery and Mapping Agency, Bethesda, MD 2001 (US govt publication '...intended to be used primarily as a manual of instruction in navigation schools and by naval and merchant marine personnel.')
- Wesley Stout, 1946 "Radar – The Great Detective" Archived 28 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine Early development and production by Chrysler Corp. during WWII.
- Swords, Seán S., "Technical History of the Beginnings of Radar", IEE History of Technology Series, Vol. 6, London: Peter Peregrinus, 1986
General
- Reg Batt (1991). The radar army: winning the war of the airwaves. R. Hale. ISBN 978-0-7090-4508-3.
- E.G. Bowen (1 January 1998). Radar Days. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-7503-0586-0.
- Michael Bragg (1 May 2002). RDF1: The Location of Aircraft by Radio Methods 1935–1945. Twayne Publishers. ISBN 978-0-9531544-0-1.
- Louis Brown (1999). A radar history of World War II: technical and military imperatives. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-7503-0659-1.
- Robert Buderi (1996). The invention that changed the world: how a small group of radar pioneers won the Second World War and launched a technological revolution. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-684-81021-8.
- Burch, David F., Radar For Mariners, McGraw Hill, 2005, ISBN 978-0-07-139867-1.
- Ian Goult (2011). Secret Location: A witness to the Birth of Radar and its Postwar Influence. History Press. ISBN 978-0-7524-5776-5.
- Peter S. Hall (March 1991). Radar. Potomac Books Inc. ISBN 978-0-08-037711-7.
- Derek Howse; Naval Radar Trust (February 1993). Radar at sea: the royal Navy in World War 2. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-55750-704-4.
- R.V. Jones (August 1998). Most Secret War. Wordsworth Editions Ltd. ISBN 978-1-85326-699-7.
- Kaiser, Gerald, Chapter 10 in "A Friendly Guide to Wavelets", Birkhauser, Boston, 1994.
- Colin Latham; Anne Stobbs (January 1997). Radar: A Wartime Miracle. Sutton Pub Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7509-1643-1.
- François Le Chevalier (2002). Principles of radar and sonar signal processing. Artech House Publishers. ISBN 978-1-58053-338-6.
- David Pritchard (August 1989). The radar war: Germany's pioneering achievement 1904-45. Harpercollins. ISBN 978-1-85260-246-8.
- Merrill Ivan Skolnik (1 December 1980). Introduction to radar systems. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-066572-9.
- Merrill Ivan Skolnik (1990). Radar handbook. McGraw-Hill Professional. ISBN 978-0-07-057913-2.
- George W. Stimson (1998). Introduction to airborne radar. SciTech Publishing. ISBN 978-1-891121-01-2.
- Younghusband, Eileen., Not an Ordinary Life. How Changing Times Brought Historical Events into my Life, Cardiff Centre for Lifelong Learning, Cardiff, 2009., ISBN 978-0-9561156-9-0 (Pages 36–67 contain the experiences of a WAAF radar plotter in WWII.)
- Younghusband, Eileen. One Woman's War. Cardiff. Candy Jar Books. 2011. ISBN 978-0-9566826-2-8
- David Zimmerman (February 2001). Britain's shield: radar and the defeat of the Luftwaffe. Sutton Pub Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7509-1799-5.
Technical reading
- M I. Skolnik, ed. (1970). Radar Handbook (PDF). McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-057913-X.
- Nadav Levanon; Eli Mozeson (2004). Radar signals. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ISBN 9780471473787.
- Hao He; Jian Li; Petre Stoica (2012). Waveform design for active sensing systems: a computational approach. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-01969-0.
- Solomon W. Golomb; Guang Gong (2005). Signal design for good correlation: for wireless communication, cryptography, and radar. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521821049.
- M. Soltanalian (2014). Signal Design for Active Sensing and Communications. Elanders Sverige AB. ISBN 978-91-554-9017-1.
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ignored (help) - Fulvio Gini; Antonio De Maio; Lee Patton, eds. (2012). Waveform design and diversity for advanced radar systems. London: The Institution of Engineering and Technology. ISBN 978-1849192651.
- E. Fishler; A. Haimovich; R. Blum; D. Chizhik; L. Cimini; R. Valenzuela (2004). MIMO radar: an idea whose time has come. IEEE Radar Conference.
- Mark R. Bell (1993). "Information theory and radar waveform design". IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. 39 (5): 1578–1597. doi:10.1109/18.259642.
- Robert Calderbank; S. Howard; Bill Moran (2009). "Waveform diversity in radar signal processing". IEEE Signal Processing Magazine. 26 (1): 32–41. Bibcode:2009ISPM...26...32C. doi:10.1109/MSP.2008.930414. S2CID 16437755.
- Mark A. Richards; James A. Scheer; William A. Holm (2010). Principles of Modern Radar: Basic Principles. SciTech Publishing. ISBN 978-1891121-52-4.
External links
- MIT Video Course: Introduction to Radar Systems A set of 10 video lectures developed at Lincoln Laboratory to develop an understanding of radar systems and technologies.
- A set of educational videos created for air traffic control (ATC) staff.
- Glossary of radar terminology
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