1 / 19

HISTORY OF RADAR, WEATHER RADAR AND RADARS IN TURKEY Dr. Ahmet Ö ztopal

HISTORY OF RADAR, WEATHER RADAR AND RADARS IN TURKEY Dr. Ahmet Ö ztopal İstanbul Technical University Meteorological Engineering oztopal@itu.edu.tr. BIRTH OF RADAR ( RA DIO D ETECTION A ND R ANGING). NATUR A L “ RADAR ”. WEATHER RADAR. BLOCK DIAGRAM OF A RADAR.

darrinv
Télécharger la présentation

HISTORY OF RADAR, WEATHER RADAR AND RADARS IN TURKEY Dr. Ahmet Ö ztopal

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HISTORY OF RADAR, WEATHER RADAR AND RADARS IN TURKEY Dr. Ahmet Öztopal İstanbul Technical University Meteorological Engineering oztopal@itu.edu.tr

  2. BIRTH OF RADAR (RADIO DETECTION AND RANGING)

  3. NATURAL “RADAR”

  4. WEATHER RADAR

  5. BLOCK DIAGRAM OF A RADAR

  6. WEATHER RADARS ACCORDING TO FREQUENCY BANDS L BAND RADARS 15 – 30 cm and 1 – 2 GHz Clear air turbulance (CAT) S BAND RADARS 8 – 15 cm and 2 – 4 GHz Near and far weather observation C BAND RADARS 4 – 8 cm and 4 – 8 GHz Short range weather observation X BAND RADARS 2.5 – 4 cm and 8 – 12 GHz; Short range weather observation and cloud development K BAND RADARS 0.75 – 1.2 cm or 1.7 – 2.5 cm and 27 – 40 GHz or 12 – 18 GHz It is similar to the X band, but is just more sensitive OPERATIONAL WEATHER RADAR

  7. İstanbul, 2003 Samsun, 2013 Zonguldak, 2003 Balıkesir, 2003 Ankara, 2000 İzmir, 2011 Muğla, 2010 Antalya, 2011 Hatay, 2011 NEXT RADARS: SAMSUN AND TRABZON, 2013 NON-POLARIMETRIC – C BAND POLARIMETRIC – C BAND

  8. HORIZONTAL POLARIZATION VERTICAL POLARIZATION

  9. RADOME ANTENNA MOUNTING OF ANTENNA AND RADOME

  10. ANKARA RADAR ALTITUDE = 1807 M

  11. ZONGULDAK RADAR ALTITUDE = 1110 M

  12. İSTANBUL RADAR ALTITUDE = 378 M

  13. BALIKESİR RADAR ALTITUDE = 642 M

  14. İZMİR RADAR ALTITUDE = 973 M

  15. MUĞLA RADAR ALTITUDE = 995 M

  16. ANTALYA RADAR ALTITUDE = 962 M

  17. HATAY RADAR ALTITUDE = 312 M

  18. REFERENCES FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THIS SUBJECT E. Büyükbas, O. Sireci, A. Hazer, I. Temir, A. Macit, C. Gecer, INSTRUMENTS AND OBSERVING METHODS REPORT No. 88, cgecer@mgm.gov.tr, WMO, 2006. F. Beştepe, METEOROLOGICAL RADAR, Presentation, fbestepe@mgm.gov.tr, Turkish State Meteorological Service, 2011. http://www.radartutorial.eu/04.history/hi04.en.html https://atom.physics.helsinki.fi/kurssit/s/radarmet/2_History.pdf I would like to thank Cüneyt Geçer and Fırat Beştepe from TSMS for their contribution.

More Related