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Introduction To Radar Systems

This document provides an introduction to radar systems, including: - The basic principles of radar such as range measurement using pulse trains and the radar range equation. - Key radar parameters like pulse repetition frequency, pulse width, average power, and unambiguous range. - Examples of military radar applications including airborne fire control radar and early warning radar. - Descriptions of monostatic, bistatic, and multistatic radar system configurations.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
309 views

Introduction To Radar Systems

This document provides an introduction to radar systems, including: - The basic principles of radar such as range measurement using pulse trains and the radar range equation. - Key radar parameters like pulse repetition frequency, pulse width, average power, and unambiguous range. - Examples of military radar applications including airborne fire control radar and early warning radar. - Descriptions of monostatic, bistatic, and multistatic radar system configurations.

Uploaded by

enes
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Introduction to Radar Systems

 Radar principle, range measurement


 Radar waveform (PRF,PRI)
 Basic Radar parameters
 Simple Radar Range Equation
 Radar applications and examples

Chapter 1, Skolnik, 3rd edition

EE 404 Radar Systems 1


Radar principle

Radar: Radio Detection And Ranging

Transmitted signal

Transmitter(Tx) Antenna

target
Receiver(Rx) Echo signal

Range to target

EE 404 Radar Systems 2


Range to a target

TR: time the radar signal to travel to target and back


c=the speed of light = the speed of electromagnetic waves
R=range to a target
R=cTR/2

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Radar signal: pulse train

Pulse repetition interval/period


power

Target
echo

time
=Pulse
Width
(=duration) Pulse train
TP =1/fP =Pulse repetition interval (PRI)
fP=pulse repetition frequency(PRF)
Pav=average power=Pt /TP=Pt  fP (W)
/TP =Duty cycle
Pulse energy: Ep=Pt  (J)

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Problem

An airborne pulsed radar has a peak power of 10KW, and uses two PRFs, fp1
= 10KHz and fp2 = 30KHz .
 What are the required pulse widths for each PRF so that the average
transmitted power is constant and is equal to 1500Watts ?
 Compute the pulse energy in each case.

TP =1/fP =Pulse repetition interval (PRI)


fP=pulse repetition frequency(PRF)
Pav=average power=Pt /TP=Pt  fP (W)
/TP =Duty cycle
Pulse energy: Ep=Pt  (J)

EE 404 Radar Systems 5


Radar waveform: temporal

1
Amplitude

-1

-2

-3
0 5 10 15 20 25
Time (us)

0.5
RF signal (High frequency carrier)
fRF=fc=fo80MHz
0
while fP=0.1MHz
-0.5

-1
0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1
Duty cycle= 1/10=0.1 or 10%

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Radar waveforms: temporal & spectral
1

0.9
1

0.8

0.6

0.8
0.4

0.2

0
0.7
-0.2

-0.4 0.6
-0.6

-0.8 0.5
-1

-1 -0.5 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 0.4

0.3
PRI 
0.2
1

0.1
0.8
0
2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16
0.6

0.4

0.2
fo=fc 1/
0
-5 0 5 10 15 20 25
f (GHz) 1/PRI

BW=B=1/ or 1.2/

EE 404 Radar Systems 7


Example: Medium range air-surveillance radar

Pt=1MW TP= 1 ms=1000s


power

10-12W

time
=1s

fP=1/TP=PRF=1/PRI=1000Hz=1kHz
Duty cycle=1/1000=0.1%
Power attenuation=Pt/Pr= 1018=180dB

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(Maximum) Unambiguous Range

 Time between the pulses is too short, then


 an echo signal from a long range target might arrive after the
transmission of the next pulse,
 introducing an incorrect or “ambiguous range” measurement
 Echoes arriving after transmission of the next pulse
 second time around echoes
 multiple time around echoes
 The (maximum) unambiguous range is the range beyond which
targets appear as second time around echoes

Run=cTP/2=c/2fP

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Range ambiguity

1 c
f p= =
PRI 2R un

A
B
C

t=0 t=PRI=1/PRF t=2 PRI=2/PRF t=3 PRI=3/PRF time


(or range)

Radar Unambiguous Range PRI (1/PRF)

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Unambiguous range<=> PRF (1/PRI)

nautical miles=>nm

1nm~1,85km

(1 mile~ 1,6 km)

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Example: Airborne Fire Control Radar (F16C/D)

Many variants in
 X band: 8-12.5 GHz

 Low, Medium and high PRF for


air and surface targets
Multimode radar system
AN/APG series  Low PRF(high PRI) mode: air
to surface engagements (500
Hz)
 High PRF velocity search
mode: increased detection
range for air interceptions
(15KHz)
 Medium PRF search mode:
increases range and angle
information( [0.5,15]kHz)
 More enhancements !

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Example: Early Warning Radar(Tall King)

 A-band (150-170 MHz sub-band)


 Low PRF (100-200 Hz)
 Range: 500-600 km (max. 1200 km)
 Power rate ~ 900 KW
 First introduced during the 1950s
 Early warning against high-altitude
aircrafts
 associated with the `Score Board B'
identification friend-or-foe system
 PRV-11 height-finding radar

EE 404 Radar Systems 13


Monostatic and bistatic operations

Monostatic target

Tx
target

Bistatic

d: distance Rx
Multistatic: radar network
M Tx and N Rx

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Range resolution and cross range

 Divide the range difference into small “bins”, range bin


R R
ΔR = max min
N
Resolving targets in cross range requires signal processing techniques
(limited by antenna beamwidth in azimuth)
Cross Range

Range

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Range resolution
Consider two targets at R1 and R2
t 2  t1 Δt
ΔR = R2  R1 = c =c
2 2
Target separated at least by ΔR can be resolved


Time (temporal)

Distance (space domain)


S=c

In order to resolve two targets in range;


Δt τ c
c =c = τ  1/ B
2 2 2B
Resolution=cτ/2
=1µs, two equal targets can be resolved if they are separated by 150m

EE 404 Radar Systems 16


Example: Range resolution

 A typical Early Warning Radar (Tall King)


PW = 10 sec
Range resolution=10 .10-6 (sec) x 3. 108 (m/sec) /2=1500m

 A typical Fire Control Radar (AN/APG series)


PW ~0,3-4 sec
Search: Range resolution=4.10-6 (sec) x 3. 108(m/sec) /2=600 m
Tracking: Range resolution=0,3 .10-6 (sec) x 3. 108(m/sec) /2=45 m

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Problem [Mahafza]

For a radar system with an unambiguous range of 100 km, and a


bandwidth of 0.5 MHz, compute the required PRF, PRI, ∆R , and τ .

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Resolution cell (3D resolution or radar cell)

Azimuth
resolution

Elevation
resolution

Range
resolution

Range resolution: pulse width


Azimuth resolution: antenna beamwidth in azimuth
Elevation resolution: antenna beamwidth in elevation

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Example

Calculate range resolutions for a target at a range of 100 km for


an Early Warning Radar system
f = 1 GHz
PRF= 300 Hz
PW = 10 sec
Antenna Beamwidth (azimuth) = 2 (deg) = 0.035 (rad)
Antenna Beamwidth (elevation) = 5 (deg) = 0.087 (rad)

 Range resolution = 10 (sec) 3 108 (m) / 2 = 1500 (m)


 Azimuth resolution = 100 000 (m) 35 10-3 = 3.5
(km)
 Elevation resolution= 100 000 (m) 87 10-3 = 8.7 (km)

EE 404 Radar Systems 20


Simple radar range equation
PtG
4πR2
PtG

Pt G
σ
Pt G σ 4πR2
Pr = Ae
4πR2 4πR2

Pt GAeσ radar cross section (RCS) of target : σ


Received power : Pr =
4π 2 R 4
When Smin = Pr for maximum range, Identical antennas are used at Rx/Tx
1/ 4 4πA
 Pt GAe σ  G= 2e ,
Maximum range : Rmax =  λ

 4π 2
S min  Maximum range
1/ 4 1/ 4
 Pt Gλ 2 σ   Pt Ae2 σ 
Rmax =   = 
 4 π 3
S min   4 πλ 2
S min 

EE 404 Radar Systems 21


Radar range: transmitted power and range

1/ 4 1/ 4
 PtGλ σ 
2
 Pt Ae σ 
2
Rmax =   = 2 
 4π  Smin 
3
 4πλ Smin 

 In order to double the maximum range


 increase the transmitted power 16 times

 Compare unambiguous range and maximum range in the


radar range equation ?

EE 404 Radar Systems 22


Pulse Radar Operation (Simplified Block)

Pulse Transmitter
modulator
Antenna
Power Waveform
Duplexer
amplifier generator Receiver

Low-noise Intermediate Matched Detector or


Mixer
RF amplifier (IF) amplifier filter demodulator

Local Video Threshold


output
oscillator amplifier decision
1001

EE 404 Radar Systems 23


Radar Frequency Band (Range of RF carrier)

Band Nominal Frequency


designation range
HF 3-30MHz
VHF 30-300MHz
UHF 300-1000MHz
Early Warning Radar: UHF, S
L 1-2GHz Radar altimetre: S, C
S 2-4GHz Meteorology radar: C and X
Airborne (fighter/attack): X and Ku
C 4-8GHz
X 8-12GHz
Ku 12-18GHz
K 18-27GHz
Ka 27-40GHz

EE 404 Radar Systems 24


New band designation

MILLI-
VHF UHF L S C X K U K KA METER

GHz .1 .15 .2 .3 .5 1 1.5 2 3 4 6 8 10 15 20 30 40 60


100

A B C D E FG H I J K L M

EE 404 Radar Systems 25


Exercises [Skolnik]

Problems (pp.27-28)
 1.1
 1.2
 1.3
 1.4
 1.5
 1.6

EE 404 Radar Systems 26

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