HOW DOES RADAR TECHNOLOGY WORK?

          Radar works in the same way as an echo. When you shout loudly at a distant wall, you will hear the echo of your voice a few seconds later. This is because the sound waves hit the solid wall and bounce back towards you. Radar uses high-frequency waves that travel much faster and much further. The radar sends out a short burst of radio waves and then listens for an echo, which tells it how far away the target is, and what it is made of.

          Airplane pilots get around this difficulty using radar, a way of “seeing” that uses high-frequency radio waves. Radar was originally developed to detect enemy aircraft during World War II, but it is now widely used in everything from police speed-detector guns to weather forecasting. Let’s take a closer look at how it works!

          We can see objects in the world around us because light (usually from the Sun) reflects off them into our eyes. If you want to walk at night, you can shine a torch in front to see where you’re going. The light beam travels out from the torch, reflects off objects in front of you, and bounces back into your eyes. Your brain instantly computes what this means: it tells you how far away objects are and makes your body move so you don’t trip over things.

          Radar works in much the same way. The word “radar” stands for radio detection and ranging—and that gives a pretty big clue as to what it does and how it works. Imagine an airplane flying at night through thick fog. The pilots can’t see where they’re going, so they use the radar to help them.

          An airplane’s radar is a bit like a torch that uses radio waves instead of light. The plane transmits an intermittent radar beam (so it sends a signal only part of the time) and, for the rest of the time, “listens” out for any reflections of that beam from nearby objects. If reflections are detected, the plane knows something is nearby—and it can use the time taken for the reflections to arrive to figure out how far away it is. In other words, radar is a bit like the echolocation system that “blind” bats use to see and fly in the dark.