RCS of ships and aircraft at HF frequencies
Abstract
Coastal radar operating at high frequency (HF) has the potential of monitoring iceberg movement and ship and aircraft traffic over a wide area of ocean. The HF radar cross-section of an aircraft-like scatterer of simple geometry is investigated. At these frequencies, the aircraft size is comparable to the wavelength. The aircraft radar cross-section (RCS) is obtained both by computation and by direct measurement. It is demonstrated that at low frequencies in the HF range, the dorsal fin is the dominant scatterer, but at high HF the fuselage can scatter more strongly than the dorsal fin. Aircraft often carry wire antennas for HF communication, and it is shown that such wires can dramatically alter the RCS of the aircraft near the resonant frequencies of the wire. The RCS of a ship modelled as a parallelepiped with mast is 20-30 decibels larger than that of an aircraft, and is dominated at low HF by the contribution of the mast.
- Publication:
-
Electrical and Computer Engineering, Volumes 1 and 2
- Pub Date:
- 1991
- Bibcode:
- 1991ecev.confQ....T
- Keywords:
-
- Radar Cross Sections;
- Radar Scattering;
- Radar Targets;
- Aircraft;
- High Frequencies;
- Radar Tracking;
- Resonant Frequencies;
- Ships;
- Communications and Radar