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How Passive Radar Works

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Why This Matters

Passive radar represents a significant advancement in radar technology by eliminating the need for dedicated transmitters, reducing costs and regulatory hurdles. Its ability to utilize existing broadcast signals makes it a versatile and covert solution for tracking objects, with implications for both military and civilian applications, including air traffic monitoring and surveillance. This innovation enhances the accessibility and deployment of radar systems across various sectors, potentially transforming how we detect and track moving objects.

Key Takeaways

Passive radar is radar that doesn't need a transmitter; it uses existing broadcasts of opportunity.

Passive radar is radar that works by listening passively. It doesn't transmit anything; it detects signals that already exist in the environment. By listening to how broadcasts like FM radio and digital TV bounce off objects, it's possible to determine their positions and velocities.

The result is a radar system with no transmitter, no expensive hardware, and no need for a broadcast license, unlike traditional, or "monostatic" radar.

Radar's General Principles

All radar relies on two core physical phenomena: the Doppler effect and signal delay.

Doppler Effect and Doppler Shift

When a source of waves and an observer are moving relative to each other, the observed frequency changes. An ambulance siren sounds higher-pitched as it approaches and lower-pitched as it drives away. This is the Doppler effect.

Radar exploits the same principle with radio waves. When a radio signal bounces off a moving object (like an aircraft), the reflected signal's frequency shifts slightly:

Object moving toward the receiver → frequency increases (positive Doppler shift aka blueshift)

→ frequency increases (positive Doppler shift aka blueshift) Object moving away → frequency decreases (negative Doppler shift aka redshift)

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