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  2. Phase-comparison monopulse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phase-Comparison_Monopulse

    All of the typical measurements that a non-monopulse system make are done using the sum channel, e.g., range, Doppler, and angle. However, the angle measurement is limited in that the target could be anywhere within the beam width of the sum beam, and therefore the system can only assume that the beam pointing direction is the same as the ...

  3. Space-time adaptive processing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space-time_adaptive_processing

    Both pre and post Doppler methods can be used in the beamspace. Post Doppler methods may also be used on the full antenna element input as well to reduce the data in this dimension only. A popular example is displaced phase center antenna (DPCA), which is a form of data-independent STAP in the beamspace, pre-Doppler. [7]

  4. ARINC 708 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARINC_708

    The data portion is organized into 512 range bins per scan angle value. Each (three-bit) range bin contains a color value to indicate the intensity at that position. Settings for the ARINC 708 system is typically controlled using an ARINC 429 interface.

  5. Monopulse radar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopulse_radar

    The name refers to its ability to extract range and direction from a single signal pulse. Monopulse radar avoids problems seen in conical scanning radar systems, which can be confused by rapid changes in signal strength. The system also makes jamming more difficult. Most radars designed since the 1960s are monopulse systems.

  6. Multiple frequency-shift keying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_frequency-shift...

    Just as the bandwidth of intentional AM increases with the modulation rate, fading spreads a signal over a frequency range that increases with the fading rate. This is Doppler spreading, the frequency domain counterpart of coherence time. The shorter the coherence time, the greater the Doppler spread and vice versa.

  7. Ambiguity function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambiguity_function

    In pulsed radar and sonar signal processing, an ambiguity function is a two-dimensional function of propagation delay and Doppler frequency, (,).It represents the distortion of a returned pulse due to the receiver matched filter [1] (commonly, but not exclusively, used in pulse compression radar) of the return from a moving target.

  8. Radar signal characteristics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radar_signal_characteristics

    Regardless, radars that employ the technique are universally coherent, with a very stable radio frequency, and the pulse packets may also be used to make measurements of the Doppler shift (a velocity-dependent modification of the apparent radio frequency), especially when the PRFs are in the hundreds-of-kilohertz range. Radars exploiting ...

  9. Chirp compression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chirp_compression

    The chirp pulse compression process transforms a long duration frequency-coded pulse into a narrow pulse of greatly increased amplitude. It is a technique used in radar and sonar systems because it is a method whereby a narrow pulse with high peak power can be derived from a long duration pulse with low peak power.