Title :
Improvements for air-surveillance radar
Author :
Skolnik, Merrill
Author_Institution :
Naval Res. Lab., Washington, DC, USA
Abstract :
Both a near-term and a far-term radar concept for improved air-surveillance are described. The near-term concept is based on operating simultaneously with multiple frequencies over two radar bands to obtain the benefits of more uniform coverage in elevation, improved target detection, improved automatic tracking, target height-finding without the need for a 3D antenna, elementary target recognition, and other attributes that result from operating over a very wide band. The far-term concept is based on operating an air-surveillance radar with a very wide bandwidth as in the near-term approach, but with an architecture quite different from that used in current air-surveillance radars. This radar looks everywhere all the time with a number of fixed directive receiving beams and an omnidirectional transmitting beam. The spatial, temporal, and spectral domains are used along with digital beamforming and digital signal processing to allow this ubiquitous radar to perform multiple functions in parallel with variable data rates and without time sharing so as to achieve simultaneous weapon control and surveillance, reduced susceptibility to intercept, and other capabilities difficult to obtain with conventional analog beamforming methods
Keywords :
airborne radar; military radar; radar detection; radar signal processing; radar tracking; search radar; target tracking; air-surveillance radar; automatic tracking; digital beamforming; digital signal processing; elevation coverage; far-term radar concept; fixed directive receiving beams; military radar; near-term radar concept; omnidirectional transmitting beam; radar bands; spatial domain; spectral domain; target detection; target height-finding; temporal domain; variable data rates; weapon control; Array signal processing; Bandwidth; Broadband antennas; Frequency; Multifrequency antennas; Object detection; Radar antennas; Radar tracking; Target recognition; Target tracking;
Conference_Titel :
Radar Conference, 1999. The Record of the 1999 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Waltham, MA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4977-6
DOI :
10.1109/NRC.1999.767195