Title :
Atmospheric turbulence effects on radar systems
Author_Institution :
US Army Space & Missile Defense Command, Huntsville, AL, USA
Abstract :
Atmospheric turbulence has been shown to have measurable effects on several aspects of radar performance. In this paper we discuss the perturbation of the angle-of-arrival (AOA) of radar beams caused by the atmosphere, the effects of lognormal- and Weibull-distributed clutter on detection performance, and the detection probability of ultrawideband pulses propagated through the atmosphere in the presence of turbulence and Gaussian noise. We find that AOA effects are on the order of a few microradians, which is a negligible level for most applications, but that clutter and noise, when combined with turbulent fluctuations, give some surprising results when the ratio of signal to clutter and noise is calculated. The detection of ultrawideband pulses is analogous to the “needle in a haystack” problem. In this paper, we present theories describing each of these phenomena, together with calculated results. For AOA, we have made measurements for one-way propagation that agree well with this theory, but the other phenomena have yet to be measured.
Keywords :
Gaussian noise; Weibull distribution; atmospheric turbulence; direction-of-arrival estimation; log normal distribution; radar clutter; radar detection; radar signal processing; Gaussian noise; Weibull-distributed clutter; angle-of-arrival estimation; atmospheric turbulence; detection probability; lognormal-distributed clutter; radar beam; radar system; ultrawideband pulse; Antenna measurements; Equations; Mathematical model; Pollution measurement; Radar; Receivers; Repeaters; AOA; angle-of-arrival; detection probability; diffraction limited; microwave beams; signal-to-clutter-and-noise; turbulent atmosphere; ultrawideband;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace and Electronics Conference (NAECON), Proceedings of the IEEE 2010 National
Conference_Location :
Fairborn, OH
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-6576-7
DOI :
10.1109/NAECON.2010.5712944