A W4 Detection
A W4 Detection
Rh 0 = 2.21 ha [ Mm ]
Long distance detection
chimney
mast
shadows
Antenna Antenna
A size of an echo
• An echo observed on the radar display can be
interpreted in a dimension corresponding to the
scale of the screen (range scale) and in the
spatial dimension.
• In the screen scale, the echo size is measured
in millimeters when its spatial dimension is
measured in meters or nautical miles.
• In navigation practice, the spatial dimension is
more useful for the navigator
Creating of radar picture
• At the moment of transmitting the pulse by the
transmitter
▫ The system selects consecutive memory cells for a
given work cycle
▫ The speed of selecting the next cells is constant in the
spatial dimension and equals c / 2, and in the screen
dimension depends on the range scale on which the
radar works - depends on the distance represented by
the single memory cell.
• When the receiver receives an echo pulse,
▫ The value of the currently selected cell (corresponding
to the distance of the detected object) changes to
other than zero value.
Creating of radar picture
• Radial distance
▫ Corresponds to a number of selected memory cell
▫ Is proportional to a distance between radar and
target.
• The angular position of the time base on the
screen
▫ is synchronized with the angular position of the
antenna, which allows you to determine the
direction in which the detected object is located.
Radial dimension of an echo
• The radial length of the echo is the sum of the
diameter of the dot and half the length of the
echo pulse.
• In turn, the duration of the echo pulse may take
the smallest value equals to the time of the
transmitted pulse or it may be greater by the
value of the flying time of microwaves over the
object.
The influence of the aspect on the
target response
The influence of the shape on the
target response
The effect of irradiated area on target
response
The effect of coherence on echo
strength
Integration of signals from sloping
surfaces
Integration of signals
from sloping surfaces
Angular dimension of an echo
• If the next pulse also hits the object - this will
cause the next light dots, shifted slightly in the
direction of rotation of the time base but usually
overlapping with the previous ones.
• Most often, several, dozen or several dozens of
successive pulses hit the point object causing
further flashes on the screen, which in effect
gives a resultant picture of the echo on the
screen.
Angular dimension of an echo
• The lightening of dots last until the whole cross
section of the horizontal antenna characteristics
move over the object
The size of the echo from the point
sized object
Angular dimension
wymiar kątowy e
zoom
w powiększeniu •
Radial
•
dimension
c
•
wymiar
2 promieniowy
echa Ae
położenie obiektu
średnica
punktowego
plamki
Dot’s Location of point sized object
diameter
Dimensions of the echo
• Generally, the dimensions of the echo can be
determine by the following relationships:
c
Ae = ++r
2
e = + +
where :
Ae – radial dimension of the echo,
e – angular dimension of the echo,
r, - radial dimension of the object, the object's angle of view - provided that the object reflects the entire surface
The echo’s shape
Number of pulses which irradiates
(hits) an object.
• The number of pulses (m) reflected from the point
object during one rotation of the antenna depends
on the pulse repetition frequency (fp), the width of
the radiation characteristic in the horizontal plane
() and the antenna rotation speed (n), is given by:
* f
m=
p
[bezwym.]
6*n dimensionless.
where:
[°],
fp [Hz],
n [rot/min]
Variation of the angular dimension of
an echo
• It is possible that the first (or last) pulse from the
number determined by the equation will not be
reflected from the object, as a result of which the
width of the echo will decrease.
• The angular width between the two pulses () is :
=
6*n
f p