Radar Erim Denklemi Konuları Pekiştirelim
Transkript
5/14/2013 Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group TOBB ETÜ – Turgut Özal - Bilkent TOBB UNIVERSITY OF ECONOMICS AND TECHNOLOGY DERS 3 Radar Erim Denklemi Yrd. Doç. Dr. Sevgi Zübeyde Gürbüz ELE 465: Radar Sinyal İşleme Temelleri ELE 565: Radar ve Sonar Sistemleri Konuları Pekiştirelim 2 Menzil, menzil çözünürlüğü Açısal çözünürlüğü Doppler frekansı Minimum detectable range Maximum unambiguous range Radar Erim Denklemi Radar Kesiti Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 1 5/14/2013 Soru 1 3 Consider a radar transmitting pulses of duration t seconds at a “pulse repetition frequency” of PRF pulses per second (pps). In terms of PRF and/or t, what is the maximum range at which a target can be located so as to guarantee that the leading edge of the echo from that target on one pulse is received before transmission begins for the next pulse? (This range is called the maximum unambiguous range or the first range ambiguity.) What is the unambiguous range if PRF = 3000 pps (often written, somewhat carelessly, as 3000 Hz) and t = 10 ms? What is the range if we require the trailing edge of the first pulse be received before the leading edge of the next pulse is transmitted (which is more realistic), and we also require a 10 ms switching time between transmit and receive (still more realistic)? Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Çözüm 4 Diyelim ki hedefimizin uzaklığı R t = 2R/c zaman sonra gönderdiğimiz darbe geri gelecektir Bir sonra ki darbeyi 1/PRF = PRI sonra gönderiyoruz, dolayısıyla 2R/c < PRI olmasını istiyoruz → Rmax = 0.5c/PRF = 50 km Daha gerçekçi bir hesap yapabiliriz: Darbe uzunluğunu (t) ve de switching süresini hesaba katalım 1 2R t t switch PRF c c 1 Rmax t t switch → Rmax = 47 km 2 PRF Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 2 5/14/2013 Soru 2 5 Suppose the parameters of a radar are such that the power of the echo from a particular target is just detectable at a range of 50 miles. If the target RCS is reduced by 10 dB, what will be the new detection range? By how many dB must the RCS be reduced to reduce the detection range to 5 miles? Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Çözüm 6 Radar Range Denklemini sadece RCS ve menzili açığa vuracak şekilde yazalım: Pr k R4 RCSin 10 dB küçülmesi demek alınan gücün 1010/10 0.1 kat düşmesi demek. Hedefin hala sezilebiliyor olması için alınan gücün aynı kalmasını istiyoruz. Yanı oranın değişmemesi için R^4 da 0.1 kat azalması gerek. 4 Rnew 0.1 Rnew 500.14 28 miles Rold Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 3 5/14/2013 Çözüm’e Devam 7 Eğer menzil 0.1 kat azalırsa, alınan gücün aynı kalması için RCS (0.1)^4 kat azalmalı: RCS 40 dB azalmalı Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Soru 3 8 According to the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, the radar cross section (RCS, s) of a B-52 bomber is about 1,000 m2, while that of a B-2 stealth bomber is 10-6 m2. If a given radar system could detect the B-52 at a range of 100 km, at what range could the same radar system detect the B-2 stealth bomber? Assume that atmospheric losses are negligible. If the B-2 flies at 550 mph, how much warning time would the radar give? Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 4 5/14/2013 Çözüm 9 İki uçaktan yansıyan güçler öncelikle aynı olmalı: Pr k 4 k 4 R stealth R B 52 Atmosferik kayıpları ihmal edersek, her iki durum için hesaplanan ‘k’ faktörü aynı olacaktır: 106 103 4 4 R4 4 Rstealth stealth R B 52 105 Rstealth 562 m Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Çözüm’e Devam 10 Uyarı süresi: 550 mph = 246 m/s t 562 / 246 2.24 sec Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 5 5/14/2013 Radar Erim Denklemi 11 Pr 2 2 PG t 4 3 R Ls La R 4 W Vericinin gücü, dalga boyu önceden bilinir Kayıplar için modeller, ölçümler bulunmakadır Anten özelliklerinden G hesaplanabilir RCS’in modellenmesi gerekir Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 12 ANTENLER Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 6 5/14/2013 Koordinat Sistemi 13 P R, , z Radar works in spherical coordinates boresight direction = range y antenna (elevation angle) x (azimuth angle) Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Aperture Antennas 14 Parabolic dishes, flat plates, etc. Far-field antenna radiation pattern is the Fourier transform of the aperture current distribution: Dy 2 E A y 2 y j sin e dy 1.8 m diameter parabolic dish reflector antenna (image courtesy of Darius Ltd.) Dy 2 Important parameters are peak gain peak sidelobe mainbeam (3 dB) width Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 7 5/14/2013 Uniform Current Distribution Antenna Simplest case y E() Dy x Dy sin Dy sin E Dy sin normalized magnitude of radiation pattern 15 1 0.9 0.8 3 dB width 0.7 Peak Sidelobe Level 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 -100 -80 -60 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 angle off boresight, (degrees) Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 For a Typical Antenna: 16 Gain: G = 26,000 33 7.9 33 (3 ,3 in degrees) (3 ,3 in radians) (Slightly different scale factors are common in other sources) 1.4 Dy 3 dB Beamwidth: 3 2sin 1 Bazı kişiler 0.89 faktoru düşürüp sadece lambda / D kullanmaktadır – bu 4dB beamwidth’e tekabul eder. 0.89 Dy radians Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 8 5/14/2013 Array Antennas 17 Uniform array of individual elements Conducive to digital beamforming d a0 ••••• incoming signal a1 ••••• a2 a3 a N 1 E Antenna pattern is product of array factor and element pattern: E AF Eel N 1 j 2 nd sin AF E0 an e n 0 Eel cos Linear array case: AF E0 sin N d sin sin d sin Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Example Array Antennas 18 APG-68 in F-16 F-22 Solid State Active Array Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 9 5/14/2013 Soru 4 19 In terms of Dy and l, what is the peak-tofirst null beamwidth (called the Rayleigh beamwidth) in radians of the antenna pattern for an aperture antenna with constant illumination? Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Çözüm 20 Hatırlayın, aperture antenna için E 1st null occurs when E()=0, i.e. Numerator = 0 Dy sin Dy sin Dy sin 1 sin 0 sin D y Since peak occurs at = 0, peak-to-first-null-beamwidth is Dy sin 1 Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 10 5/14/2013 Soru 5 21 Compute an exact expression for the cross-range resolution, approximated in the previous class as Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Çözüm 22 Sum of the legs of two triangles: 2 R sin 2 This is approximately R Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 11 5/14/2013 Soru 6 23 What is the maximum 3 dB beamwidth 3 in degrees such that the approximation for the cross-range resolution, R3, has an error of no more than 1%? Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Çözüm 24 Matematiksel olarak şartımız: R3 2 R sin 3 0.01 2 R sin 3 2 2 Numerik çözümle: 3 3 0.488 rad 28 2 3 2.02 sin Bu approximation’un büyük beamwidth’ler için geçerli olduğunu gösteriyor. Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 12 5/14/2013 Soru 7 25 Find the received power Pr expected from a radar and target having the following parameters: RF frequency = 95 GHz (W band), transmitted power = 100 W, antenna beamwidth = 2º in azimuth and 5º in elevation, system losses = 5 dB, target range = 3 km, target RCS = 20 m2. Use Fig. 1-3 and assume operation near sea level to estimate atmospheric losses. What is the ratio in decibels of the received power to the transmitted power? Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Çözüm 26 26000 Gain: G = c/f = 3.16 mm Ls = 5 dB = 10^(5/10) = 3.16 Atmospheric Loss at 95 GHz... 33 26000 2600 2(5) Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 13 5/14/2013 Çözüm’e Devam 27 * Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Çözüm’e Devam 28 Atmospheric Losses = 0.4 dB/km at sea level Range is 3 km for a round trip distance of 6 km So La(R) = 6 x 0.4 = 2.4 dB = 10^(2.4/10) = 1.74 Pr Pr 2 2 PG t 4 3 R 4 Ls La R W 100(2600) 2 (3.16 10 3 ) 2 (20) 1.53 10 13W (4 )3 (3000) 4 (3.16)(1.74) Pr 1.53 10 13 1.53 10 15 10 log(1.53 10 13 ) 148dB Pt 100 Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 14 5/14/2013 Soru 8 29 By how many dB will the received power be reduced (not the absolute power received, but the reduction in power) in problem #7 if the weather changes from clear to a heavy rain of 25 mm/hr? Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Çözüm 30 @heavy rain: 13 dB/km → La = 78 dB @clear: La = 2.4 dB ► Reduction = 75.6 dB Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 15 5/14/2013 31 RANGE EQUATION FOR VOLUME AND AREA TARGETS Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 For Distributed Targets 32 Remember: Pr Pt 2 4 3 Ls V R0 ,0 ,0 P 2 , R 4 La R d R , , Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 16 5/14/2013 Volume Scattering 33 Observed RCS is presumed to be due to scatterers uniformly distributed throughout the resolution cell RCS expressed in terms of RCS per cubic meter, called volume reflectivity, denoted h : Units are m2/m3 = m-1 d = h dV = h R2dR dW dW = differential solid angle Range equation becomes Pr Pt 2h 4 3 Ls V R0 , 0 ,0 P 2 , dR d W R 2 La R Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Integrate over Range 34 Assume the variation in atmospheric loss over the range extent of a resolution cell is negligible La(R0) pull this term outside of integral La(R) Remaining integral over range terms is R R 0 2 R R 0 Pr 2 R R dR 2 2 2 R02 R R0 R 2 Pt 2h R 4 3 R Ls La R0 W 2 0 P 2 , d W Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 17 5/14/2013 Integrate over Angle 35 If we approximate the main lobe of the antenna pattern P(,) as a Gaussian, the integral becomes P 2 , d d 33 8ln 2 G 2 0.5733G 2 Frequently simply assume a constant gain over main lobe, zero elsewhere, giving P 2 2nd , d d G 2 33 approximation is 2.5 dB higher than first Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Range Eq. For Volume Scattering 36 Pr 2 2 PG hR 33 t 4 3 R02 Ls La R0 Note power decreases as R2, not R4 as in point scatterer case because spreading of antenna beam causes resolution cell to grow as R2 Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 18 5/14/2013 Area Scattering 37 Observed RCS presumed due to scatterers uniformly distributed on a 2-D surface RCS expressed in terms of RCS per square meter, called area reflectivity or “sigma-nought”, denoted 0 : units are m2/m2 = dimensionless! But often expressed in dB as 10log10(0), called dBsm d D R R0 0 dA dA = differential surface area Range equation becomes Pt 2 Pr P 2 , 0 dA 3 4 4 R0 Ls La R0 A R , , Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 0 Two Cases of Area Scattering - 1 38 Assume planar reflecting surface (flat earth) A scatterer does not contribute significantly to the receiver output unless it is both illuminated by the pulse and within the antenna mainbeam Range extent of contributing scatterers depends on relative size of illuminated area and pulse length z x z=0 Beam-limited range extent R 0 z = -h R03 ground plane R03 sin Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 19 5/14/2013 Two Cases of Area Scattering - 2 39 x z=0 Pulse-limited range extent R0 z = -h ground plane R cos Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Pulse- vs. Beam-Limited 40 If the beam footprint on the ground is greater than the pulse footprint, the resolution cell extent in range is pulse limited and vice-versa beam-limited: R tan 3 R0 pulse-limited: R tan 3 R0 Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 20 5/14/2013 Beam-Limited Area Range Equation 41 Using constant-gain mainlobe approximation: R0 R02 dA R0 d d d d sin sin Pr 2 2 0 PG 33 t 4 3 R02 Ls La R0 sin Note RCS varies as R2 cell gets wider in both range and cross-range as R increases Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Pulse-Limited Area Range Equation 42 Using constant-gain mainlobe antenna approximation: dA R0 d Pr R R R d 0 d d cos cos 2 2 0 PG R 3 t 4 3 R03 Ls La R0 cos Note RCS varies as R3 cell gets wider in cross-range only as R increases Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 21 5/14/2013 Simplified Approach 43 These results are equivalent to assuming a particular form for in the point target range equation: clutter: 0 times the scattering area volume clutter: h times the scattering volume area Case Volume Scatterer Beam-Limited Area Scatterer Pulse-Limited Area Scatterer RCS h R R3 R3 h R 2 R33 0 2 R R 33 0 R3 3 sin sin 0 RR3 R 0 R 3 cos cos Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 Teşekkür 44 Bu slaylarda yoğun olarak Prof. Mark Richards’in sunumundan yararlanılmıştır, kendisine teşekkür ederiz. Ankara Radar Systems and Remote Sensing Research Group © SZG 2012 22
Benzer belgeler
Radar Kavrami
At every (azimuth,elevation) (,), we get
backscatter based on the local differential
RCS
again
SM180-RxTx FIXED MOTORIZED ANTENNA SOLUTION
SM180-RxTx FIXED MOTORIZED ANTENNA SOLUTION
As a fixed motorised antenna, SM180 Transmit-Receive Antenna System created a perfect alternative to
the customers. SM180 which is supported by AKS250, h...
SM240-Ro FIXED MOTORIZED ANTENNA SOLUTION
Optionally tracking system with the
beacon receiver or DVB tuner card.
Precision compression molded
Offset reflector
Three axis motorised system
Supported by AKS250 antenna controller
Galvanized ki...
PDF - SVS Satellite Systems
Motorised Antenna System.
• The versatile pedestal mount allows for fixed or motorized applications and features 180 degree
azimuth coverage.
• Three axis, motorized system with 180 degrees azimuth...