Radar horizon
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The radar horizon is a critical area of performance for aircraft detection systems that is defined by the distance at which the
radar Radar is a detection system that uses radio waves to determine the distance ('' ranging''), angle, and radial velocity of objects relative to the site. It can be used to detect aircraft, ships, spacecraft, guided missiles, motor vehicles, we ...
beam rises enough above the
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's surface to make detection of a target at low level impossible. It is associated with the low elevation region of performance, and its geometry depends on terrain, radar height, and signal processing. This is associated with the notions of ''radar shadow'', the ''clutter zone'', and the ''clear zone''. Airborne objects can exploit the radar shadow zone and clutter zone to avoid radar detection by using a technique called nap-of-the-earth navigation.


Definition

Without taking into account the refraction through the atmosphere, the radar horizon would be the geometrical distance D_h from the radar to the horizon only taking into account the height H of the radar above sea-level, and the radius of the earth R_e (approximately 6.4·103 km): :D_h = \sqrt When H is small compared to R_e, this can be approximated by: :D_h = \sqrt he percentage error, which increases roughly in proportion to the height, is less than 1% when H is less than 250 km. With this calculation, the horizon for a radar at a altitude is . The radar horizon with an antenna height of over the ocean is . However, since the pressure and water vapor content of the atmosphere varies with height, the path used by the radar beam is
refracted In physics, refraction is the redirection of a wave as it passes from one medium to another. The redirection can be caused by the wave's change in speed or by a change in the medium. Refraction of light is the most commonly observed phenomeno ...
by the change in density. With a standard atmosphere, electromagnetic waves are generally bent or refracted downward. This reduces the ''shadow zone'', but causes errors in distance and height measuring. In practice, to find D_h, one must be using a value of 8.5·103 km for the effective Earth's radius R_e (4/3 of it), instead of the real one. So the equation becomes: :D_h = \sqrt And for the same examples : the radar horizon for the radar at a altitude will be and the one at will be . Furthermore, layers with an inverse trend of temperature or humidity cause atmospheric ducting, which bends the beam downward or even traps radio waves so that they do not spread out vertically. This phenomenon occurs in two circumstances: * A thin stable layer of elevated humidity * Stable
temperature inversion In meteorology, an inversion is a deviation from the normal change of an atmospheric property with altitude. It almost always refers to an inversion of the air temperature lapse rate, in which case it is called a temperature inversion. Nor ...
Ducting influence becomes stronger as frequency drops. Below 3 MHz, the whole volume of the air acts as a waveguide to fill in the radar shadow and also reduces radar sensitivity above the duct zone. Ducting fills in the shadow zone, extends the distance of the clutter zone, and can create reflections for low PRF radar that are beyond the instrumented range.


Limiting factors


Shadow Zone

Objects beyond Dh will be visible only if the height satisfies the following requirement: :H_T > \frac where H_T is the target height and R_T is the target range. Objects below this height are in the radar shadow.


Clutter Zone

The ''Clutter Zone'' is where radar energy is in the lowest several thousand feet of air. This extends to a distance of about 120% of the radar horizon. There are a large number of reflectors on the ground at these elevation angles. Prevailing winds of about 15 mile/hour cause these reflectors to move, and this wind stirs up smaller objects into the air. This interference is called
clutter Clutter and its derivations may refer to any of the following: Excessive physical disorder * Clutter, a confusing, or disorderly, state or collection, and possible symptom of compulsive hoarding * Clutter (marketing), numerous advertisements, a ...
. The clutter zone includes the littoral zone and terrain when operating on or near land. A beam 1^o wide will illuminate millions of square feet of surface by the time the radar pulse reaches . Targets are generally much smaller, so will be masked by clutter. Clutter reflections can create unwanted false targets. The antenna for radar with no signal processing clutter-reduction improvement is not normally aimed near the ground to avoid overwhelming computers and users.
Moving Target Indication Moving target indication (MTI) is a mode of operation of a radar to discriminate a target against the clutter. It describes a variety of techniques used for finding moving objects, like an aircraft, and filter out unmoving ones, like hills or tree ...
(MTI) can reduce clutter by about 35 dB. This allows objects as small as to be detected. Prevailing wind and weather can degrade MTI performance, and MTI introduces blind velocities. Pulse-Doppler radar can reduce clutter by over 60 dB, which can allow objects smaller than to be detected without overloading computers and users. Systems using pulse-Doppler signal processing with speed rejection set above the wind speed have no clutter zone. This means that the clear region extends all the way to the ground.


Clear Region

The Clear Region is the zone that begins several kilometers beyond the radar horizon at low elevation angles. The clear region is also the zone above low elevation angles with clear skies. There is no clear region in areas with weather and heavy biological activity (rain, snow, hail, high winds, and migration).


Over-the-horizon

A number of radar systems have been developed that allow detection of targets in the shadow zone. These systems are collectively known as
over-the-horizon radar Over-the-horizon radar (OTH), sometimes called beyond the horizon radar (BTH), is a type of radar system with the ability to detect targets at very long ranges, typically hundreds to thousands of kilometres, beyond the radar horizon, which is ...
s. Three systems are generally used; the most common uses the ionosphere as a reflector and beams the signal skyward and then listens for the tiny signals that are returned from the sky, others use a bistatic arrangement with distant antennas looking for objects that pass between them, and a small number of systems use "creeping waves" that travel into the shadow zone.


See also

* Line-of-sight propagation *
Hull-down In sailing and warfare, hull-down means that the upper part of a vessel or vehicle is visible, but the main, lower body (hull) is not; the term hull-up means that all of the body is visible. The terms originated with sailing and naval warfare i ...


References

{{Reflist Radar signal processing Radar theory