Title: Introduction to Radar
1Introduction to Radar
- Shaohua Li
- Graduate Student
- Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
2Functions of Radar
- RADAR is a method of using electromagnetic waves
to remote-sense the position, velocity and
identifying characteristics of targets.
3History of Radar
- Radar was developed for military purposes during
W. W. II. - The British and US Military used radar to locate
ships and airplanes.
4History of Radar
5History of Radar
- During the war, radar operators found annoying
blips continually appearing on the radar screen.
Scientists had not known that radar would be
sensitive enough to detect precipitations. - Today, radar is an essential tool for predicting
and analyzing the weather.
6Weather Radar
- Weather Surveillance Radar, designed in 1957. It
became the primary radar for the weather service
for nearly 40 years.
7Weather Radar
- NSSL's first Doppler Weather Radar located in
Norman, Oklahoma. 1970's research using this
radar led to NWS NEXRAD WSR-88D radar network.
8The expensive radar equipment is protected by the
sphere shaped cover. On the inside it looks
similar to this
9Two Basic Radar Types
- Pulse Transmission
- Continuous Wave
10Pulse Diagram
PRF
Resting Time
Carrier Wave
PW
11Pulse Radar Components
Synchronizer
Transmitter
RF Out
Power Supply
ANT.
Duplexer
Echo In
Display Unit
Receiver
Antenna Control
12Pulse Transmission
- Pulse Repetition Time (PRT1/PRF)
- Pulse Width (PW)
- Length or duration of a given pulse
- PRT is time from beginning of one pulse to the
beginning of the next - PRF is frequency at which consecutive pulses are
transmitted. - PW can determine the radars minimum range
resolution. - PRF can determine the radars maximum detection
range.
13Continuous Wave Radar
- Employs continual RADAR transmission
- Relies on the DOPPLER EFFECT
14Doppler Frequency Shifts
15Continuous Wave Radar Components
Transmitter
Antenna
CW RF Oscillator
OUT
IN
Discriminator
Mixer
AMP
Antenna
Indicator
16Pulse Vs. Continuous Wave
- Pulse Echo
- Single Antenna
- Gives Range Alt.
- Susceptible To Jamming
- Physical Range Determined By PW and PRF.
- Continuous Wave
- Requires 2 Antennae
- No Range or Alt. Info
- High SNR
- More Difficult to Jam But Easily Deceived
- Amp can be tuned to look for expected frequencies
17Classification by Primary Radar Mission
- Search radars and modes
- Surface search
- Air search
- Two-dimensional search radars
- Three-dimensional search radars
- Tracking radars and modes
- Track-while-scan
18 AN/FPS-24 Search Radar
19AN/SPS-49 Very Long Range Air Surveillance Radar
20AN/TPS-43
The AN/TPS-43 radar system, with a 200 mile
range, was the only Air Force tactical ground
based long range search and warning radar for
nearly two decades. Most of the AN/TPS-43 radars
are being modified to the AN/TPS-75
configuration.
3-D Air Search Radar
21AN/TPS-75
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24Tracking Radar
- Tracking radars dwell on individual targets and
follow their motion in azimuth, elevation,range
and Doppler. - Most tracking radars can follow only a single
target. - A few radars can track multiple targets
simultaneously. An electronically steered array
antenna is used so that beam positions can be
moved quickly from one target to another.
25AN/APG-66 in the F-16
http//www.tpub.com/neets/book18/79j.htm
26Types of Antenna
- Introducing two types of antenna
- reflector mirror antenna
- array antenna
27Reflector Antenna
28Parabolic Reflector
Basic paraboloid reflector Truncated
paraboloidOrange-peel paraboloidCylindrical
paraboloid
29Array Antenna
- An array antenna is composed of multiple element
arrays for example, linear array, area array or
nonformal array. The element antennas are
half-wavelength dipoles, microstrip patches and
wave guide slot. The advantages of array antenna
are to enable beam scanning without changing the
looking angle of each array antenna and to
generate an appropriate beam shaping by selective
excitation of current distribution of each
element.
30An Example of Array Antenna
31Edgewall Slot Array-AN/APY-2 on E-3D Aircraft
The E-3 Sentry is an airborne warning and control
system (AWACS) aircraft that provides all-weather
surveillance, command, control and communications
needed by commanders of U.S. and NATO air defense
forces. As proven in Desert Storm, it is the
premier air battle command and control aircraft
in the world today.
32AN/FPS-115 PAVE PAWS Early Warning Radar Array
Antenna
PAWS stands for Phased Array Warning System. The
radar is used primarily to detect and track
sea-launched and intercontinental ballistic
missiles. It can search over long distance(to
5000 km or more). Each system has two array faces
72.5 feet in diameter with 2677 element
positions. To provide surveillance across the
horizon, the building is constructed in the shape
of a triangle. The two building faces supporting
the arrays, each covering 120 degrees, will
monitor 240 degrees of azimuth.
33Radar Performance and Frequency Bands
- Bandwidth
- The bandwidth determines the range resolution and
frequency agility capabilities of the radar. - Antenna
- For a given gain, low frequency antennas are
larger than high frequency. Low frequency are
favored for long-range search applications,
because of the larger effective area associated
with a given gain, allowing more effective
capture of echoes. - Transmitter
- In general, more radio frequency power can be
produced at low frequency than at high. - Receiver
- There is no clear choice between high and low
frequencies. - Propagation
- The attenuation at high frequency is dramatic. A
given raindrop has over three orders of magnitude
more scattering cross-section at X-band(10 GHz)
than at L-band(1.3 GHz), producing far more
clutter and signal at the higher frequency. - Targets
- If the wavelength is long compared to the target
extent, targets are Rayleigh scatterers, and have
small, non-fluctuating RCS. - Summary
- In general, the longer the range at which the
radar must detect targets, the lower the
frequency of the radar.
34Reference
- www.fas.org/man/dod-01/sys/ac/equip/
- http//www.tpub.com/neets/book11/46a.htm
- http//www.tpub.com/neets/book18/79j.htm
- etc.