Selected Topic in Communication Engineering: Ir Dr. Ahmad Fadzil Ismail
Selected Topic in Communication Engineering: Ir Dr. Ahmad Fadzil Ismail
Selected Topic in Communication Engineering: Ir Dr. Ahmad Fadzil Ismail
Introduction
Acknowledgement
Why radar?
The basics
Course agenda
What Means are Available for
Lifting the Fog of War ?
D-Day + 1
D-Day
Iwo Jima
1945
Long range
Attributes
All-weather
Day/night
3-space target location
Reasonably robust against
countermeasures
Early Days of Radar
Chain Home Radar, Deployment Began 1936
Chain Home Radar Coverage Sept 2006 Photograph of
circa 1940 Three Chain Home
(21 Early Warning Radar Sites) Transmit Towers, near
Dover
Dover
Radar Site
95'
45'
0'
Main Gap Filler
Antenna Antenna
Courtesy of Raytheon.
Used with permission. Courtesy of Raytheon. Used with permission. Courtesy of US Navy.
Introduction-14
MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Courtesy of Global Security.
AG 6/18/02
Used with permission. Courtesy of Raytheon. Used with permission.
Airborne and Air Traffic Control Radars
Courtesy of US Air Force. Courtesy of US Navy.
Introduction-15
MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Courtesy of US Air Force.
AG 6/18/02
Courtesy of US Air Force.
Courtesy of Boeing Used with permission
Instrumentation Radars
Introduction-16
MIT Lincoln Laboratory
AG 6/18/02
Outline
Why radar?
The basics
Course agenda
RADAR
RAdio Detection And Ranging
Antenna
Propagation
Target
Cross
Section
Reflected
Transmitted Pulse
Pulse (echo)
Radar observables:
Target range
Target angles (azimuth & elevation)
Target size (radar cross section)
Target speed (Doppler)
Target features (imaging)
Electromagnetic Waves
Radar Frequencies
Properties of Waves
Relationship Between Frequency and Wavelength
Speed of light, c
1, 2, 3,
c = 3x108 m/sec
= 300,000,000 m/sec
Figure by
MIT OCW.
Phase, A sin( )
90 phase offset
Amplitude (volts)
A
Phase, A sin( 90 o )
Properties of Waves
Constructive vs. Destructive Addition
y y
x x E
z z
Radar Frequency Bands
Wavelength 1 km 1m 1 mm 1 m 1 nm
Ku
K
UHF L-Band S-Band C-Band X-Band Ka
VHF W
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Allocated Frequency (GHz)
30 20 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
Wavelength (cm)
IEEE Standard Radar Bands
(Typical Use)
HF 3 30 MHz
Waveform
Transmitter
Propagation Generator
Medium
Signal Processor
Target
Cross
Section Pulse Doppler
Antenna Receiver A/D
Compression Processing
Main Computer
Console /
Tracking & Display
Detection Parameter
Estimation
Recording
Radar Range Equation
Antenna Aperture A
Transmitted Pulse
Transmit Power PT
Target Cross Section
Received Pulse
Figure by MIT OCW. R
Received Signal
Noise
Example:
Signal Power
Signal-to-noise ratio (dB) = 10 log 10
Noise Power
Scientific
Factor of: Notation dB
10 101 10 0 dB = factor of 1
100 102 20 -10 dB = factor of 1/10
1000 103 30 -20 dB = factor of 1/100
.
. 3 dB = factor of 2
.
1,000,000 106 60 -3 dB = factor of 1/2
Pulsed Radar
Terminology and Concepts
Pulse length
Peak power
Power
Target
Return
Pulse length
Duty cycle =
Pulse repetition interval
1 MW
Power
Target
Return 1 W
Pulse length
Duty cycle = 10%
Pulse repetition interval
MHz = Megahertz
MW = Megawatt
Radar Waveforms
Waves?
Waves, modulated
by on-off action of
or Pulses? pulse envelope
Radar Waveforms (contd.)
Frequency
Time
Frequency Linear
Frequency-
Modulated
(LFM)
Waveform
Time
Radar Range Measurement
e
ang
R
Target
d
i tte
r ansm se
T Pul
ected
fl
Re ulse
P
c
Target range =
2
where c = speed of light
= round trip time
Courtesy of Raytheon. Used with permission.
Antenna Gain
G = antenna gain
.
Propagation Effects on Radar Performance
Atmospheric attenuation
Over-the-horizon diffraction
Atmospheric refraction
Radar
Radarbeams
beamscan
canbe
beattenuated,
attenuated,reflected
reflectedand
and
bent
bentby
bythe
theenvironment
environment
Radar Cross Section (RCS)
RCS
Incident x = Reflected
Power Density Power
(Watts/m2) (m2) (Watts)
1 msec x c = 150 km
2
?
Figure by
MIT OCW.
Solution: Use pulse with changing frequency and signal process using matched filter
Matched
Filter
Uncompressed pulse Compressed pulse
Bandwidth
Narrowband Low
Waveform c
Frequency
Compressed R = Range
Pulse 2B Resolution
Bandwidth
Time Range
Wideband
Waveform High
Compressed Range
Frequency
Resolution
Bandwidth
Pulse
Time Range
.
Bandwidth
Very High
(X 30)
Power
High
(X 10)
Medium
(X 3)
Low
Detected Target
False
Alarm Detection
Threshold
Power
Missed
Target
RMS
Noise
Level
Range
Coherent Integration
Signal buried
Pulse 1
in Noise
(SNR < 0 dB)
Voltage
+ Pulse 2
0
+ Pulse 3
Signal integrated
.. out of Noise
. (SNR increases by N)
+ Pulse N
Power
|x|2
Signals are same each time;
add coherently (N2)
Noise is different each time;
0
doesnt add coherently (N)
Doppler Effect
Observer A Observer B
Driver Hears
Figure by MIT OCW.
Doppler Shift Concept
c
f ==
f
c v
c
f = f (2v/)
Doppler
shift
Why Doppler is Important
Clutter returns are much larger than Note: if youre moving too, you need
target returns to take that into account.
however, targets move, clutter
doesnt.
Doppler
Doppler lets
lets you
you separate
separate things
things that
that are
are moving
moving from
from things
things that
that arent
arent
Clutter Doppler Spectra
70
Land
60
Sea
50 Rain
Relative Power (dB)
Chaff
40 Birds
30
20
10
Target
0
-10
-20
0 50 100 150 200
Velocity (m/s)
Radar Block Diagram
Waveform
Transmitter
Propagation Generator
Medium
Signal Processor
Target
Cross
Section Pulse Doppler
Antenna Receiver A/D
Compression Processing
Main Computer
Console /
Tracking & Display
Detection Parameter
Estimation
Recording
Outline
Why radar?
The basics
Course agenda
Introduction to Radar Systems
Outline
Introduction
Radar Equation
Propagation Effects
Radar Antennas