The Boot Lake MF imaging radar
Abstract
The Middle-Atmosphere Imaging Radar is located at the Boot Lake field site, 10 miles east of Brighton, Colorado. It operates at 2.66 MHz with a 50-kW peak pulse power in 30 microsecond pulses. Ten independent coaxial-collinear antennas are used; five are parallel and run east-west, the other five are parallel and run north-south. Each antenna consists of eight half-wave dipoles. All ten antennas or a crossed pair may be used for transmission; all ten are sampled by pairs in rapid sequence for reception. The system is now operating on a campaign basis as a Fourier interferometer by measuring the complex voltages on the ten antennas and Fourier transforming them independently. Multiple scatterers within a single range gate, now sorted by velocity, can be located individually by their phase angles. The transmitted signal cycles through four modes (N-S linear, right-hand circular, E-W linear, and left-hand circular).
- Publication:
-
Middle Atmosphere Program. Handbook for MAP. Volume 14
- Pub Date:
- December 1984
- Bibcode:
- 1984maph...14..324A
- Keywords:
-
- Imaging Radar;
- Meteorological Radar;
- Radar Imagery;
- Radio Meteorology;
- Colorado;
- Computer Programs;
- Dipole Antennas;
- Interferometers;
- Radar Antennas;
- Radar Receivers;
- Radar Transmission;
- Communications and Radar