. Airborne radar. Airplanes; Guided missiles. 334 GENERIC TYPES OF RADAR SYSTEMS AND TECHNIQUES. X/j Radians (Theoretical) Near Zone-c—^Far Zone Fig. 6-29 Antenna Beamwidth Pattern. shown in Fig. 6-29. As can be seen, the concept of angular beamwidth holds only for the so-called far zone (Fraunhofer zone) where the range R is greater than d"^ l\P At closer ranges, the effective pattern width is variable, but as a general rule it can be considered equal to the antenna dimension. Thus the resolution obtainable with an antenna aperture of (S'feet cannot be better than d feet regardless of wh
. Airborne radar. Airplanes; Guided missiles. 334 GENERIC TYPES OF RADAR SYSTEMS AND TECHNIQUES. X/j Radians (Theoretical) Near Zone-c—^Far Zone Fig. 6-29 Antenna Beamwidth Pattern. shown in Fig. 6-29. As can be seen, the concept of angular beamwidth holds only for the so-called far zone (Fraunhofer zone) where the range R is greater than d"^ l\P At closer ranges, the effective pattern width is variable, but as a general rule it can be considered equal to the antenna dimension. Thus the resolution obtainable with an antenna aperture of (S'feet cannot be better than d feet regardless of what is implied by the angular beamwidth expression. For a given antenna aperture and operating frequency, certain techniques such as monopulse and sidelobe cancellation are useful for "sharpening" the beam and thereby obtaining better definition (that is to say the transition of the signal return as the beam crosses an isolated target will be sharper). Improved resolution has been claimed from the use of these techniques. Such claims rest upon relatively shaky theoretical grounds and are based more upon the appearance of better resolution resulting from sharper definition than upon a rational repudiation of the basic laws governing the formation of interference patterns. In certain cases where prior knowledge of the target characteristics exists, velocity resolution may be employed to give the appearance of better angular resolution than one would predict from the beamwidth. Such a case is shown in Fig. 6-30 where an antenna points straight down from an airborne. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Povejsil, Donald J. Princeton, N. J. , Van Nostrand
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