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The Boot Lake MF imaging radarThe 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).
Document ID
19850024224
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Adams, G. W.
(Utah State Univ. Logan, UT, United States)
Brosnahan, J. W.
(Tycho Technology, Inc., Boulder Colo., United States)
Date Acquired
August 12, 2013
Publication Date
December 1, 1984
Publication Information
Publication: International Council of Scientific Unions Middle Atmosphere Program. Handbook for MAP. Vol. 14
Subject Category
Communications And Radar
Accession Number
85N32537
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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