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Introduction To Radar Systems Third Edition

This document is a book review of the third edition of "Introduction to Radar Systems" by Merrill Skolnik. It summarizes that the book is a classic reference in the field of radar systems, covering fundamental concepts of radar signal processing. The review notes that while the third edition extensively revises the material, it is disappointed some topics from the previous edition were removed, such as bistatic radar, and finds the lack of discussion on synthetic aperture radar and electronic countermeasures surprising given their modern applications. However, the reviewer concludes it is still an excellent reference for students and engineers alike, and they plan to use the third edition to teach a radar systems course in the fall.

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0% found this document useful (1 vote)
3K views1 page

Introduction To Radar Systems Third Edition

This document is a book review of the third edition of "Introduction to Radar Systems" by Merrill Skolnik. It summarizes that the book is a classic reference in the field of radar systems, covering fundamental concepts of radar signal processing. The review notes that while the third edition extensively revises the material, it is disappointed some topics from the previous edition were removed, such as bistatic radar, and finds the lack of discussion on synthetic aperture radar and electronic countermeasures surprising given their modern applications. However, the reviewer concludes it is still an excellent reference for students and engineers alike, and they plan to use the third edition to teach a radar systems course in the fall.

Uploaded by

Khatri Ravi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Book Review

Introduction to Radar Systems


Third Edition
Edited by Merrill Skolnik
McGraw-Hall, New York, New York, USA
2001,772 pages, Hard cover, ISBN 0-07-290980-3
Introduction to Radar Systems, by Merrill Skolnik, is
universally recognized as the classical reference in the field.
This review is of the third edition of the text; the first edition
was printed i n 1962 and covers the basic concepts needed to
understand radar systems, radar signal processing, the
phenomenology of radar signals and clutter, and the underlying
systems technology. This third edition represents anextensive
revision of classic text. The material presented is based on a
one-year graduate level course and also serves as an excellent
reference. The first six chapters cover the fundamentals of
radar systems and signal processing. Chapter I , an
introduction to concepts, nomenclature, history and the famous
radar range equation: a survey of radar and raison d'etre;
Chapter 2 presents the details of the radar range equation and
the parameters that impact radar performance; Chapter 3
introduces moving target indication (MTI) and pulse-Doppler
radar; Chapter 4 extends the surveillance mission to consider
tracking radar; Chapter 5 provides a summary of statistical
detection theory, covering the important topics of matched
filtering, detection criteria and detector structure, and constant
false alarm rate (CFAR) receivers; and Chapter 6 details the
exploitation of radar signals, covering radar measurements, the
ambiguity diagram analysis of radar waveforms, the use of
pulse compression for high range resolution, and target
recognition for discriminating between different target
signatures in various levels of fidelity.
The next two chapters introduce the phenomenology of
radar clutter and radar signal propagation: Chapter 7 describes
the surface-clutter radar equation, statistical models for land,
sea, and weather clutter, and the detection of targets when radar
sensitivity is clutter-limited; Chapter 8 presents the theory of
the propagation of radar waves, extending the free-space
propagation model used in the earlier forms of the radar range
equation; topics such as forward scattering, refraction, ducting,
diffraction, attenuation, n, backscatter, and external noise are
considered.
Chapters 9, IO, and 1 1 consider the technology utilized in
radar antennas, transmitters, and receivers, respectively.
Chapter 9, the longest in the book, covers antenna technology.
Radar antenna functions are explained, and the antenna
parameters and radiation properties are discussed. Reflector
antennas, mechanically steered planar arrays, and electrically
steered phased arrays are covered, replacing what were two
chapters in the second edition. Chapter 10 describes transmitter
technology, to include linear-beam power tubes, solid-state RP
sources, magnetrons, and cross-field amplifiers. Chapter 11
discusses receiver technology, detailing the receiver noise
figure, superheterodyne receivers, duplexors, and displays.
The book is very well-written and comprehensive. Each
chapter includes problems and questions that can be used either
in a classroom environment or for self-study. The author
recommends a one-term course covering Chapters 1-4 and
most of Chapter 8. A second-term could then cover Chapters
1-7 and 9, with Chapters 10 and 11 discussed as time permits.
The printing I reviewed had many errors, but included an errata
sheet that seemed to catch nearly everything I discovered in
reading the material.
Every author has to make decisions and balance tradeoff's
i n determining what material to include in a text that covers
such a broad topic. I was somewhat disappointed by the
removal of topics from the preceding edition that the author felt
were unnecessary. The entire concept and description of
bistatic radar has been removed, even though, historically, this
played a major role in the development of radar. Also, I find the
lack of discussion about synthetic aperture radar surprising,
especially since this ranks with MTI and tracking radar in terms
of the most popular applications of radar today. Lastly, I sorely
miss the section on electronic counter-countermeasures, which
I would have preferred to see extended in the new edition,
instead of omitted.
I n conclusion, Introduction to Radar Systems, Third
Edition, is an excellent and wide-ranging reference,
well-suited to the student and practicing engineer, alike. I have
had a copy of this book on my shelf for over a decade, and am
looking forward to using this third edition to teach EE 5635,
Radar Systems Analysis and Design, at Virginia Tech for the
Fall semester.
- J. Scott Goldstein
IEEE AESS S.wtenrs Magazine. October 2001 19

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