📡 RADAR Technology — Radio Detection and Ranging
Definition · Working Mechanism · Types by Band (L/S/C/X/Ka) · Doppler Radar · AESA · SAR · Applications · India's Radar Network · Mission Mausam · Wayanad X-band · NISAR · Uttam AESA · KSHITIJ · PYQs & MCQs
Military radar antennas — large rotating dish antennas are the traditional radar design. The antenna continuously rotates 360° to scan all directions. Each rotation takes 2–12 seconds. The rotating mechanical antenna is being replaced in modern systems by AESA (Active Electronically Scanned Array) radar, which can steer the beam electronically in microseconds without any moving parts. (Source: Wikimedia Commons)
Classic radar display (PPI scope) — the rotating sweep line shows detected targets as bright dots. Each complete rotation gives a 360° picture of all objects within range. In weather radar, the display shows rainfall intensity (colours: green=light rain, yellow=moderate, red=heavy, purple=extreme). In air traffic control, dots represent aircraft with their speed and altitude codes. (Source: Wikimedia Commons)
1. Transmitter
Generates short pulses of radio waves at precise frequency
2. Antenna sends
Pulses radiated outward in a beam direction
3. Echo
Pulse hits object (aircraft/cloud/ship) → reflected back as echo signal
4. Receiver
Same (or separate) antenna catches the returning echo
5. Processor
Computer calculates: range (time delay) + direction (antenna angle) + velocity (Doppler shift)
6. Display
Target shown on radar screen with position, speed, altitude
Radio waves travel at the speed of light (300,000 km/s). If an echo takes 0.001 seconds (1 ms) to return:
Distance = (300,000 × 0.001) ÷ 2 = 150 km
Rule of thumb: Every microsecond (10⁻⁶ s) of delay = 150 metres of range. A 1-millisecond delay = 150 km range.
Why divide by 2? The pulse travels TO the target AND BACK — so total distance = 2× the target's range.
In RADAR: A moving object (aircraft/raindrop) reflects radio waves at a slightly different frequency than transmitted:
• Moving TOWARDS radar → frequency increases (blue shift)
• Moving AWAY from radar → frequency decreases (red shift)
The frequency shift (Doppler shift) is proportional to the velocity. Radar computers calculate exact speed from this shift. This is how a speed gun catches speeding cars!
| Radar Mode | How it Works | Measures | Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pulsed Radar | Sends short bursts (pulses) of radio energy. In between pulses, antenna listens for echoes. PRF (Pulse Repetition Frequency) determines how often pulses are sent. | Range (distance) very accurately. Direction via antenna angle. | Air traffic control, weather radar, ship navigation |
| Continuous Wave (CW) Radar | Transmits radio waves continuously (no pulses). Cannot measure range directly (no time reference). Uses Doppler shift to measure velocity. | Velocity very accurately. Cannot measure range. | Speed guns (police), missile approach warning, guided weapons |
| Pulsed Doppler Radar | Combines both: sends pulses (for range) AND analyses frequency shift of echoes (for velocity). Modern standard for most applications. | BOTH Range AND Velocity simultaneously. | Weather radar, air defence, modern fighter aircraft, Doppler weather radar (IMD) |
| FMCW Radar | Frequency Modulated Continuous Wave. Continuously varies (sweeps) the transmitted frequency. Range = difference between transmitted and received frequency at any instant. | Range AND velocity at short to medium distances. | Automotive radar (car collision warning, cruise control), drone detection, altimeters |
Lower frequency (longer wavelength) = Less resolution BUT longer range and better weather penetration
Example: X-band (8–12 GHz, 2–4 cm wavelength) can detect tiny raindrops and fog particles because the wavelength is close to the particle size — ideal for Wayanad's heavy rainfall/landslide warning. But it has shorter range. S-band (2–4 GHz, 7.5–15 cm) has longer range and penetrates moderate rain — ideal for cyclone tracking from Visakhapatnam covering the entire Bay of Bengal. Think of it like a camera lens: X-band = telephoto (high zoom, narrow view, detail-rich); L-band = wide-angle (low zoom, broad view, long range).
🔧 Special-Purpose RADAR Technologies
Response: Union Ministry of Earth Sciences approved installation of X-band radar in Wayanad district.
Why X-band? X-band (8–12 GHz, 2–4 cm wavelength) is best for detecting small particles — very fine raindrops, fog, orographic (terrain-induced) precipitation. Wayanad's hilly terrain and hyperlocal rainfall patterns require high-resolution, short-range radar for early warning.
Also approved: A C-band radar in Mangaluru (4–8 GHz, 250 km range) to provide regional-scale coverage alongside the hyperlocal X-band.
Budget: ₹2,000 crore
Goal: Transform India's weather forecasting infrastructure — aim for weather-ready, climate-smart India
Key components:
• Install 60 meteorological radars in Phase 1 (by 2026)
• Deploy 56 additional Doppler Weather Radars nationwide
• Install 10 X-band Doppler radars in Northeast + Lahaul & Spiti
• Expand rainfall monitoring stations to 7,000+
• Develop farmer-friendly weather apps
• Upgrade IITM Pune's supercomputers (Arka + Arunika) for better modelling
Significance: India already loses 2,000+ lives per year to extreme weather. Better radar → better forecasting → earlier warnings → fewer deaths.
Launch: Expected 2025 onboard ISRO's GSLV Mk II
Radar payload:
• L-band radar: 1.25 GHz, 24 cm wavelength (built by NASA) — penetrates vegetation and soil; measures subsurface changes
• S-band radar: 3.2 GHz, 9.3 cm wavelength (built by ISRO) — higher resolution surface mapping
What it will do: Map entire Earth's surface every 12 days. Tracks: land deformation (earthquakes, volcanoes, subsidence), glacial changes, deforestation, crop growth, wetland changes, sea-level rise. Will produce 85 TB of data per day — the most data-rich Earth observation satellite ever built.
Cost: ~$1.5 billion (India-USA joint mission)
• X-band Active Electronically Scanned Array
• Designed for LCA Tejas multi-role fighter aircraft
• Mk-1: Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) technology
• Mk-2: Gallium Nitride (GaN) — more power efficient and powerful
• Simultaneous air-to-air tracking, air-to-ground strike, maritime surveillance
• Replaces Russian N011M Bars radar on Sukhoi Su-30MKI
KSHITIJ AESA Radar (LRDE, 2024):
• X-band AESA for maritime patrol aircraft
• Designed for P-8I and other maritime patrol platforms
• Superior maritime surveillance of India's vast EEZ
Swordfish LRTR: Long Range Tracking Radar for India's Ballistic Missile Defence. Tracks incoming ballistic missiles. Equivalent to Israeli Green Pine or US SPY-1.
| Radar System | Band | Purpose | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| IMD DWR Network | C-band (primary), S-band | Cyclone tracking, monsoon monitoring, flash flood warning — national coverage | ✅ Operational; expanding to 56 more |
| Wayanad X-band Radar | X-band (8–12 GHz) | Hyperlocal rainfall + landslide early warning for Western Ghats | ✅ Approved Oct 2024; installation underway |
| 10 X-band Doppler Radars | X-band | Northeast states + Lahaul & Spiti — mountain weather forecasting | ⏳ Procurement/installation in progress |
| Mangaluru C-band Radar | C-band (4–8 GHz, 250 km) | Regional weather coverage for Western Ghats + Arabian Sea | ✅ Approved alongside Wayanad (2024) |
| NISAR (NASA-ISRO SAR) | L-band + S-band | Earth surface mapping every 12 days — deforestation, glaciers, earthquakes, crops | ⏳ Launch 2025 (GSLV Mk II) |
| Uttam AESA Radar | X-band (fighter aircraft) | Multi-mode airborne radar for LCA Tejas (air-to-air, air-to-ground, maritime) | ✅ Development complete; integration |
| KSHITIJ AESA Radar | X-band (maritime) | Maritime patrol and surveillance — India's EEZ and Indian Ocean region | ✅ Unveiled June 2024 |
| Swordfish LRTR | X-band (high power) | Ballistic Missile Defence tracking — detects incoming ballistic missiles at long range | ✅ Operational (classified details) |
| RISAT-1, RISAT-2B, RISAT-2BR1 | C-band / X-band (SAR) | All-weather, day-night Earth observation satellite — agriculture, disaster, defence | ✅ Operational in orbit |
- It uses the Doppler effect to measure the velocity of detected objects in addition to their distance.
- Doppler weather radars can determine both the intensity of rainfall and the speed and direction of movement of a storm.
- Doppler radar is not useful for meteorological applications as it only measures the velocity of solid objects like aircraft, not water droplets.
- a) 1 only
- b) 1 and 2 only ✓
- c) 2 and 3 only
- d) 1, 2 and 3
Statement 2 CORRECT: Doppler weather radar (DWR) is extremely powerful for meteorology. From the intensity (power) of the echo, it measures rainfall rate. From the Doppler shift of the echo, it measures the velocity of raindrops relative to the radar — revealing the wind speed and direction inside the cloud/storm. This can detect rotation inside thunderstorms (indicating tornadoes), locate the centre of a cyclone, and track its movement speed and direction. IMD's DWR network uses this to forecast cyclones like Biparjoy and Amphan with increasing accuracy.
Statement 3 WRONG: This is the complete opposite of reality. Doppler weather radar is specifically designed for meteorological applications and works excellently on water droplets (rain, hail, snow). The Doppler effect applies to any moving object that reflects radar waves — solid or liquid — including raindrops moving with wind currents. In fact, weather radar's primary use IS to track raindrops and cloud particles, not aircraft.
- (a) X-band's shorter wavelength (2–4 cm) enables detection of very small particles like fine raindrops and fog, providing high-resolution, hyperlocal rainfall measurement for early landslide warning in Wayanad's hilly terrain — whereas longer-wavelength S or L band radars with wider coverage are better for large-scale cyclone tracking at sea
- (b) X-band radar is cheaper to install and operate than S-band or L-band radars, making it the preferred choice for budget-constrained disaster response installations in rural areas
- (c) X-band radar operates in the ionosphere and can therefore provide Over-the-Horizon (OTH) coverage of Wayanad's hilly terrain from a distance of 300 km, unlike shorter-range S and L band systems
- (d) X-band radar can penetrate mountains and detect rainfall on the leeward side of the Western Ghats where S-band and L-band radars are blocked by mountainous terrain
- (a) AESA radar uses optical fibre cables instead of radio waves, making it completely immune to electromagnetic interference from enemy jamming systems
- (b) AESA radar eliminates the need for any transmitter — it uses only a receiver array that passively detects emissions from enemy aircraft, making it completely undetectable by hostile electronic warfare systems
- (c) AESA uses thousands of solid-state transmit/receive modules (TRMs) that steer the radar beam electronically in microseconds without any moving parts — enabling simultaneous tracking of multiple targets, rapid frequency hopping to defeat jamming, and faster beam switching than any mechanical radar can achieve
- (d) AESA radar operates in the visible light spectrum rather than radio waves, providing photographic quality images of targets at ranges of 500+ km that conventional radar cannot match
- (a) SAR produces colour photographs with higher resolution than the best optical satellites, enabling identification of individual trees and buildings from space
- (b) SAR operates with radio waves that penetrate clouds and work day and night — making it the only satellite imaging technology that provides continuous, weather-independent Earth observation throughout the year, critical for monsoon-season flood assessment, cloud-covered tropical deforestation monitoring, and all-weather military reconnaissance
- (c) SAR uses the Earth's own magnetic field to guide the radar beam, eliminating the need for any onboard power source and making SAR satellites far cheaper to build and launch
- (d) SAR can only be used over oceans because land surfaces absorb the radar waves — making it exclusively useful for maritime applications like ship detection and wave monitoring
- (a) S-band radar is the only frequency that can penetrate ocean water to detect cyclone formation in the deep sea before the storm reaches the surface
- (b) S-band's very high frequency (above 10 GHz) provides extremely detailed images of individual water droplets within cyclone eyewalls, enabling precise prediction of storm intensity
- (c) S-band radar operates in the ultraviolet spectrum, which is absorbed by storm clouds, allowing the radar to detect the exact boundaries of cyclone cloud bands
- (d) S-band's wavelength (7.5–15 cm) provides a favourable balance between range and weather penetration — it covers 250–400 km (enough to monitor an entire cyclone system) while being less attenuated by heavy rainfall than X-band, allowing it to see through the storm's outer rain bands to track the cyclone's overall structure and movement
| Topic | Key Facts |
|---|---|
| Definition | RADAR = Radio Detection And Ranging. Uses radio waves to detect range, direction, velocity, and characteristics of objects. Works day/night, all weather. Pulse echo principle (like bat's echolocation). First practical radar: Robert Watson-Watt (UK), 1935. |
| Working | Transmitter emits pulse → reflects off object → echo received → time delay = range; Doppler shift = velocity; antenna angle = direction. Range formula: Distance = (c × time) ÷ 2, where c = speed of light (300,000 km/s). |
| Doppler Effect | Moving object changes frequency of reflected wave. Moving towards = frequency increases; moving away = decreases. Frequency shift proportional to velocity. Used in: weather radar (cloud/rain velocity), speed guns, aircraft radar, cyclone tracking. |
| Frequency Bands | L-band (1–2 GHz): long range ATC, NISAR NASA component. S-band (2–4 GHz): cyclone detection, NISAR ISRO component, Visakhapatnam (1970). C-band (4–8 GHz): IMD DWR network, 250 km range, Mangaluru. X-band (8–12 GHz): high-res, short-range, fog/rain, Wayanad (2024), Uttam AESA, KSHITIJ. Ka-band (26–40 GHz): speed guns, automotive radar. |
| AESA Radar | Active Electronically Scanned Array. Thousands of TRMs (Transmit/Receive Modules). Electronic beam steering (microseconds, no moving parts). Simultaneous multi-target tracking, frequency hopping (anti-jamming). India: Uttam AESA (DRDO/LRDE, X-band, for LCA Tejas, GaAs Mk-1 / GaN Mk-2). KSHITIJ AESA (maritime patrol, June 2024). |
| SAR | Synthetic Aperture Radar. Satellite/aircraft-borne. Penetrates clouds, works day/night. Simulates large antenna using platform movement. India: RISAT series (C and X band). NISAR (L+S band, NASA-ISRO, launch 2025, maps Earth every 12 days, 85 TB/day). |
| India 2024-25 | Wayanad X-band (Oct 2024): approved after Wayanad landslides (July 2024, 200+ deaths). Mission Mausam (Sept 2024): ₹2,000 crore, 60 radars by 2026, 56 DWRs, 10 X-band for Northeast + Himachal. NISAR: 2025 launch. Uttam AESA: integration with Tejas. KSHITIJ AESA: maritime patrol (June 2024). |
| Applications | Weather: cyclone/monsoon/flood warning. ATC: aircraft tracking. Defence: air surveillance, missile guidance, BMD. Navigation: ships (fog/night). Agriculture: SAR crop mapping. Traffic: speed guns. Space: debris tracking. Geology: InSAR for ground deformation, GPR for subsurface. |
Trap 1 — "Higher frequency radar has longer range" → WRONG! It is the exact opposite. Higher frequency (shorter wavelength) = shorter range but higher resolution. Lower frequency (longer wavelength) = longer range but lower resolution. This is why S-band (2–4 GHz) is used for cyclone tracking from Visakhapatnam (need 250–400 km range), while X-band (8–12 GHz) is used for Wayanad's hyperlocal landslide warning (need high resolution over 30–60 km). Higher frequency radar is also more attenuated by rain — X-band loses signal in heavy rain (rain fade), while S-band penetrates through the storm's outer rain bands.
Trap 2 — "NISAR uses X-band radar; both components built by ISRO" → WRONG (two errors)! NISAR uses L-band + S-band — NOT X-band. The L-band component (1.25 GHz, 24 cm wavelength) is built by NASA; the S-band component (3.2 GHz, 9.3 cm) is built by ISRO. These are SAR (Synthetic Aperture Radar) instruments that penetrate cloud and vegetation. X-band was not chosen because L+S band combination provides optimal Earth surface measurement for NISAR's scientific goals (land deformation, glaciers, vegetation, groundwater). Always remember: NISAR = L (NASA) + S (ISRO).
Trap 3 — "AESA radar physically rotates at very high speed to scan targets quickly" → WRONG! The defining characteristic of AESA (Active Electronically Scanned Array) is that it has NO moving parts. Beam steering is done electronically by adjusting the phase of signals from thousands of individual TRMs (Transmit/Receive Modules). This electronic steering happens in microseconds — thousands of times faster than any mechanical rotation could achieve. The absence of moving parts also means much higher reliability and longer service life. Mechanical rotation is the old design (conventional dish radar like the Chain Home WW2 system); AESA is the modern solution that replaced it.
Trap 4 — "Doppler radar only measures the speed of solid objects like aircraft, not liquids or gases" → WRONG! The Doppler effect applies to any moving object that reflects electromagnetic waves — solid, liquid, or gas. Weather Doppler radar specifically works on water droplets and ice crystals inside clouds. By measuring the Doppler shift of radio waves reflected by these water particles, the radar determines wind speed and direction inside the cloud, storm rotation, and precipitation movement. This is the entire basis of modern meteorological radar — detecting liquid and solid precipitation particles moving with wind.
Trap 5 — "India's first cyclone radar was X-band, installed in Mumbai in 1970" → WRONG (two errors)! India's first S-band cyclone detection radar was installed in Visakhapatnam in 1970 — NOT Mumbai, and NOT X-band. S-band was chosen for its long range and rain penetration needed for Bay of Bengal cyclone monitoring. The first locally made radar variant was commissioned in Mumbai in 1980 — a separate milestone. These two facts are commonly confused: Visakhapatnam 1970 (first cyclone radar, imported, S-band) vs Mumbai 1980 (first locally made radar). Always associate Visakhapatnam with India's cyclone monitoring history.


