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Introduction To Radar Systems: Third Edition

This document summarizes the key concepts from the textbook "Introduction to Radar Systems" by Merrill I. Skolnik. It provides an overview of radar principles and components, including radar history, basic operation, common waveform characteristics, antenna patterns and the radar equation. It also reviews different radar types and applications. The document aims to introduce students to the fundamentals of radar systems and technology.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
658 views35 pages

Introduction To Radar Systems: Third Edition

This document summarizes the key concepts from the textbook "Introduction to Radar Systems" by Merrill I. Skolnik. It provides an overview of radar principles and components, including radar history, basic operation, common waveform characteristics, antenna patterns and the radar equation. It also reviews different radar types and applications. The document aims to introduce students to the fundamentals of radar systems and technology.

Uploaded by

Unknown424
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS

Third Edition
By : Merrill I. Skolnik

Second Edition
By : Merrill I. Skolnik

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS

Third Edition
By : Merrill I. Skolnik

Chapter 1:
A Introduction to Radar

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


Contents

 Chapter 1: An Introduction to Radar


 Chapter 2: The Radar Equation
 Chapter 3: MTI and Pulse Doppler Radar
 Chapter 4: Tracking Radar
 Chapter 5: Detection of Signals in Noise
 Chapter 6: Information from radar Signals
 Chapter 7: Radar Clutter
 Chapter 8: Propagation of Radar Waves
 Chapter 9: The Radar Antenna
 Chapter 10: Radar Transmitters
 Chapter 11: Radar Receiver

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


What is the Radar?

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


What is the Radar?

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


What is the Radar?

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


What is the Radar?

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


Radar Advantages
 Cloud and smoke penetration.
 Night vision.
 Forest canopy penetration and canopy structure.
 Complements visible/infrared sensors (sensitive to terrain features and moisture).
 Good for discrimination of terrain structure (roughness) and drainage patterns.

Radar Disadvantages
 Interpretation requires knowledge of radar interaction with surfaces.
 Speckle (dark and bright pixels) limits interpretation.
 Satellite systems are not yet multispectral and multi polarization (usually one band/one
polarization) on most satellite platforms (limits forest canopy information).
 Not good for discrimination and mapping of different vegetation types except at very
general levels.
 Data analysis can be hindered in steep topography and rough terrain due to extreme
layover effects.

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


Review of Common Radar Types

• CW
• Simple Pulsed Range Radar
• Pulse Doppler
• Pulse Compression (Chirp and Phase Coded)
• Frequency Agile
• MTI (Coherent and Coherent-on-Receiver)
• Mono-pulse
• Phased Array
• SAR
• Bi-static Radars
• Instrumentation
• Multimode
• Other (MLS, ILS, TACAN)

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


History of the radar
• Before World War II: A simple radar by several country is proposed and applied.

• After World War II: the radar technology grew rapidly.


• Use of Doppler effect in MTI (moving target indicator).
• Use of High power stable amplifier such as klystron, TWT and solid state amplifier
instead of the magnetron tube.
• Use of mono-pulse radar for better accuracy.
• Use of pulse compression technique to achieve the range resolution.
• Use of Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) for imaging of ground surfaces.
• Development of Airborne radar.
• Phase array Antenna for electronically scan of environments without mechanical
movement of the antenna.
• Use of HF over-the-Horizon radars to detect aircraft to almost 2000 nmi.
• Use of radar technology to recognize target by extraction of its information.
• radar to gather weather information, wind speed and direction.
• Use of digital signal processing to develop radar.

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


The Principle of the Radar

2R  c TR c  3 108 m / s

For example : TR  1 m sec  R  150Km

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


Typical Radar Waveform

PRI (Pulse Repetition Interval) 1


PRF (Pulse Repetition Frequency) PRF  PRI  1 m sec  PRF  1KHz
PRI

 is pulse width 
Duty Cycle    1 sec, PRI  1m sec  Duty Cycle  0.001
PRI

Pt is Peak Power 
 Pav  Pt for example: Pt  1 MWatts  Pav  1KWatts
Pav is Average Power PRI
INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1
Typical Radar Waveform

12
12 Watts = 10 log 10
Target echo is : 10
3
 90 dBm
10
INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1
IEEE Standard Radar Frequencies

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


Optical Region

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


Radar Block Diagram

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


Plan Position Indicator (PPI) Display

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


Antenna Pattern


Beam width = 65 D is Horizontal or Vertical dimension of antenna
D

c 3 108
For example : D  5 m and f  3 GHz     0.1 m  10 cm
f 3 109

0.1
 BW  65  1.3 deg .
5

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


The Radar Equation
Target


Pdensityin R 
Pt G  4 
4 R 2
G   2  Ae , Ae   a A
 
Ae , G
R Pt G 
Pdensityin TX  .
Pt 4 R 2 4 R 2
TX , RX
Pt G 
Pr  Pdensityin TX . Ae  . . Ae
4 R 2 4 R 2

1
 P G A  4
if Pr  S min  Rmax   t 2 e 
 (4 ) S min 
TX is transmitter 1

RX is receiver  4   PA   2 4
G   2  Ae  Rmax   t 2e 
G is gain of antenna
    4  S min 
Ae is effective aperture of antenna
Pt is peak power
 is radar cross section
R is distance (range) of target from radar

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


Example :

P 1.2 A ground-based air-surveillance radar operate at frequency of 1300MHz (L-Band). Its


maximum range is 200nmi (1 nautical mile equal 1852meter) for the detection of a target
with a radar cross section of 1m2. its antenna 12 m wide by 4 m high, and the antenna
aperture efficiency is 0.65. the minimum detectable signal is 10-13 watts. Determine the
following:

1. Antenna effective aperture and gain?


2. Peak transmitter power?
3. Pulse repetition frequency (PRF) to achieve a maximum unambiguous range of 200 nmi?
4. Average transmitter power , if the pulse width is 2 micro sec?
5. Duty cycle?
6. Horizontal and vertical beam width?

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


Solution :

1. Ae   A  0.65 12m  4m  31.2 m 2 , c 3 108


   0.2307m
f 1300 106
 4  4
 G   2  Ae  31.2  7362.90  GdB  10 log( 7362.90)  38.67dB

  0.2307 2

2. S min 
Pt G
.

4 R 4 R 2
2
. Ae 
P
4 R  2 2
S min 
4 200 1852  2 2
10 13  12.5 MWatts
G  Ae 7362.90 1 32.2
t

c c 3 108 1
3. 2 R  c T   f PRF    404 Hz  PRI   2.47m sec
f PRF 2 R 2  200 1852m 404

 2 106
4. Pav  Pt  3
12.5 106  10.12 KWatts
PRI 2.47 10


2 106
5. Duty   3
 8.097 104  0.0008
PRI 2.47 10

 0.2307  0.2307
6. HBW  65  65  1.24 deg . , VBW  65  65  3.74 deg .
D 12 D 4

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


Applications of the Radar
• Military Applications
 Space Systems
 Airborne Applications
 Maritime Applications
 Surveillance
 Search and Track
 Fire Control
 Navigation
 Missile Guidance
 Proximity Fuses
 Altimeter
 Terrain Avoidance
 Weather Mapping

• Civil Applications
 Space Systems
 Air Transport and Navigation Applications
 Maritime Applications
 Industry Applications. Speed and distance measurements
 Oil and Gas Exploration
 The movement of insects and birds.

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1
High Resolution Radars

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


New Radar systems

1. Enhanced Meteorological Radars. [Nexrad, Terminal Doppler Weather Radar, Wind profiler, TRMM
satellite weather radar and airborne wind-shear detection radar]
2. Planetary Explorations. [ Magellan for Venus, Cassini for Titan, a moon of Saturn]
3. Interferomectic Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) for 3D images.
4. Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar (ISAR).
5. Ground Penetration Radar (GPR).
6. Serial production of phased array radars. [Patriod, Aegis, Pave Paws, B-1B bomber]
7. Active aperture phased arrays.
8. Ballistic missile defense radars. [GBR and Arrow]
9. HF over the horizon radars. [ROTHR and Jindalee]
10. Battlefield surveillance. [JSTARS]
11. Radars for remote sensing of the environments.
12. Improved air-traffic control radars.
13. New multifunction airborne military fighter/attack radars.

INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1


INTRODUCTION TO RADAR SYSTEMS , Merrill I. Skolnik , Third Edition Chapter 1

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