Basic Radar Principles: Radio Waves Would Reflect From Metal
Basic Radar Principles: Radio Waves Would Reflect From Metal
Basic Radar Principles: Radio Waves Would Reflect From Metal
Introduction
• RADAR - Radio Detection and Ranging.
• Scientist Heinrich Hertz demonstrated in 1886 that
radio waves would reflect from metal.
• 1930s UK, Germany, France and USA developed radar
techniques.
• Radar at sea on a warship in 1937.
• After WWII the radar started to enter merchant ships.
• Developed to suite the civil navigation and collision
avoidance.
The Echo Principles
• A radar system has a transmitter that emits radio waves called radar signals in
predetermined directions. When these meet an object, they are usually reflected
or scattered in many directions. However, some of them absorb and penetrate
into the target to some degree. Radar signals are reflected especially well by
materials of considerable electrical conductivity —especially by most metals, by
seawater and by wet ground. Some of these make the use of radar altimeters
possible. The radar signals that are reflected back towards the transmitter are the
desirable ones that make radar work. If the object is moving either toward or
away from the transmitter, there is a slight equivalent change in the frequency of
the radio waves, caused by the Doppler Effect.
• Radar receivers are usually, but not always, in the same location as the
transmitter. Although the reflected radar signals captured by the receiving
antenna are usually very weak, they can be strengthened by electronic amplifiers.
More sophisticated methods of signal processing are also used in order to recover
useful radar signals.
The echo principle
• The weak absorption of radio waves by the medium
through which it passes is what enables radar sets to
detect objects at relatively long ranges—ranges at which
other electromagnetic wavelengths, such as visible light,
infrared light, and ultraviolet light, are too strongly
attenuated. Such weather phenomena as fog, clouds, rain,
falling snow, and sleet that block visible light are usually
transparent to radio waves. Certain radio frequencies that
are absorbed or scattered by water vapour, raindrops, or
atmospheric gases (especially oxygen) are avoided in
designing radars, except when their detection is intended.
The echo principle