EAS 4870

EAS 4870

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2018-2019.

Fundamentals of radar, antennas, and remote sensing. Exposes students to the principles underlying the analysis and design of antennas used for communication and for radar-related applications. Students also encounter both a mathematical and a practical description of how radars function, how their performance can be optimized for different applications, and how signals acquired by them can be processed. The objective is to familiarize students with a wide variety of radars rather than turn them into practicing radar engineers. Each topic is developed from basic principles so students with a wide variety of backgrounds are able to take the course. Emphasizes radar applications in geophysics, meteorology and atmospheric sciences, and astronomy and space sciences. Gives special attention to radar remote sensing of the Earth from spacecraft.

When Offered Spring (offered alternate years).

Prerequisites/Corequisites Prerequisite: PHYS 2208 or PHYS 2213 or equivalent, or permission of instructor.

Distribution Category (OPHLS-AG, PBS-AS)

Outcomes
  • Appreciate the historical, scientific, and sociological impact of radar systems.
  • Understand the reciprocity theorem and its profound consequences.
  • Learn to evaluate antenna performance using analysis and numerical methods, including computer algebra.
  • Be able to design antennas, radar systems, and remote sensing experiments for specific tasks.
  • Learn to design waveforms and process signals produced by radars and other instruments.

View Enrollment Information

Syllabi:
  •   Regular Academic Session.  Combined with: ECE 4870

  • 3 Credits Graded

  • 17179 EAS 4870   LEC 001

  • Prerequisite: PHYS 2208 or PHYS 2213 or equivalent, or permission of instructor.