Book title: Radar Essentials: A concise handbook for radar design and performance analysis
Author: G. Richard Curry
Year: 2011
Format: Spiral bound
Product Code: SBRA0290
ISBN: 978-1-61353-007-8
Pagination: 128pp
Stock Status: In stock
When you need vital data fast, turn to Radar Essentials. This compact yet comprehensive reference has compiled the most used principles, data, tables, and equations that are used by radar and aerospace system designers on a daily basis. Experts and non-experts alike will find this to be their go-to source for recalling and understanding the fundamentals and employing them in design and performance analysis.
G. Richard Curry is a consultant in radar system applications with extensive experience in radar system analysis and simulation, radar design and testing, military R&D planning and technology assessment, and research management.
He led analysis of radar system applications in military systems at Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC), and at General Research Corporation (GRC). He also designed and analyzed surveillance and tracking radars for the Raytheon Company, performed radar engineering for ballistic missile range testing at Kwajalein, and developed radar signal processing techniques at MIT Lincoln Laboratory.
Curry served in the US Navy as an Electronics Officer and has degrees in engineering and mathematics from the University of Michigan and an MS in electrical engineering from MIT. He is a member of the Radar System Panel of the IEEE Aerospace and Electronic Systems Society, and is the author of the books Radar Systems Performance Modeling, and Pocket Radar Guide.
1. Radar Basics
1.1. Radar Concept and Operation
1.2. Radar Functions
1.3. Types of Radars
1.4. Frequency Bands
1.5. Military Nomenclature
1.6. Radar Configurations
2. Radar Subsystems
2.1. Antennas
2.2. Transmitters
2.3. Receivers
2.4. Transmit/Receive Modules
2.5. Signal and Data Processing
3. Radar Performance
3.1. Radar Cross Section (RCS)
3.2. Signal-to-Noise Ratio
3.3. Detection
3.4. Search
3.5. Measurement
3.6. Tracking
4. Radar Environment
4.1. Atmospheric Losses
4.2. Rain Loss
4.3. Atmospheric Refraction
4.4. Terrain Masking and Multipath
4.5. Radar Clutter
4.6. Ionospheric Effects
4.7. Electronic Countermeasures (ECM)
5. Radar Techniques
5.1. Waveforms
5.2. Moving Target Indication (MTI) and Displaced Phase-Center Array (DPCA)
5.3. Pulse Doppler and Space-Time Adaptive Processing (STAP)
5.4. Synthetic-Aperture Radar (SAR)
5.5. Classification, Discrimination, and Target Identification
6. Computation Aids
6.1. Units and Conversion Factors
6.2. Constants
6.3. Decibels
Symbols
Glossary
References