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Old June 13th 09, 04:04 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Brian Whatcott
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Posts: 915
Default ATC Radar Question

Jackie wrote:
I understand that ATC radar uses an encoding altimeter and a transponder
operating with Mode C to determine an aircraft's altitude. Let's forget
about Mode C for a moment and switch to Mode A only or just a primary
return.

If an aircraft is at 18,000 ft (approx 3 nm) and 3 nm away from the
radar antenna, as seen on a map, how does the radar correct for slant
distance when distance is displayed (e.g. using concentric circle
distance markers on the scope or relative to a known distance, such as a
marker on the display)?

In other words how does the radar know that the aircraft is actually 3
nm away laterally and not 4.25 nm (approx slant distance at that altitude)?



I am late into the thread.
But you are presumably talking about an area surveillance radar.
Its fan beam does not typically stick 45 degrees up into the sky. Too
wasteful of energy.
Another concept to ponder: if its beam WERE able to steer up at 45
degrees or more, what do you think its path would look like on a plan
position indicator? (a regular display). You've mentioned its slant
range is 4.25 miles at 3 mile distance horizontally. 30 seconds later,
it might be overhead: where would it paint in terms of range?
Three miles?? A circular range ring at 3 miles, all round the display?

:-)

Brian W