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The definitive book on bistatic radar provides a history of bistatic systems and alerts potential designers to non-working applications and dead-ends. While reviewing basic concepts and definitions, the text explains mathematical development of relationships such as geometry, Ovals of Cassini, dynamic range, isorange and isodoppler contours, and clutter doppler spread.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Chapter 1: Introduction and Overview
- Chapter 2: History
- Chapter 3: Coordinate Systems, Geometry, and Equations
- Chapter 4: Range Relationships
- Chapter 5: Location and Area Relationships
- Chapter 6: Doppler Relationships
- Chapter 7: Target Resolution
- Chapter 8: Target Cross Section
- Chapter 9: Clutter
- Chapter 10: Electronic Countermeasures and Counter-Countermeasures
- Chapter 11: Multistatic Radars
- Chapter 12: Special Concepts and Applications
- Chapter 13: Special Problems and Requirements
- Appendix A: Early Publications of Bistatic Radar Phenomenology
- Appendix B: Width of a Bistatic Range Cell
- Appendix C: Approximation to the Location Equation
- Appendix D: Area within a Maximum Range Oval of Cassini
- Appendix E: Relationships Between Parameters in Target Location and Clutter Doppler Spread Equations
- Appendix F: Orthogonal Conic Section Theorems
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Nicholas J. Willis received a BS degree in mathematics from Stanford University in 1956 under an NROTC-Holloway scholarship. He spent five years in the U.S. Navy, two on destroyers and three the Talos guided missile program sixteen years in industry with Philco-Ford, SRI International and Systems Control, Inc.; five years at DARPA; and a final 17 years at Technology Service Corp. Mr Willis now consults and conducts short courses for government and industry. As an SES-3 at DARPA's Tactical Technology Office, Mr Willis was responsible for radar, EW and land warfare programs, including bistatic radars, LPI radars and in particular Pave Mover, the forerunner of JSTARS. When at TSC, he designed one of the F-22 radar modes. Mr Willis has won the DoD's JDR Best Paper Award twice.
Zusammenfassung
This is the only English language book on bistatic radar and provides a history of bistatic systems that points out to potential designers, the applications that have worked and the dead-ends not worth pursuing.