Submitted by scrublord123456 t3_yqly99 in askscience
Many planes today have their radar located within the nose. Why doesn’t this interfere with their readings if the same radar can detect other planes just fine.
Submitted by scrublord123456 t3_yqly99 in askscience
Many planes today have their radar located within the nose. Why doesn’t this interfere with their readings if the same radar can detect other planes just fine.
Jon_Beveryman t1_ivrgs3f wrote
Radar is "just" microwave-frequency electromagnetic radiation. The radar antenna emits a wave and then measures the return wave to "see" objects. This return wave can come from other planes, terrain features, and depending on radar design, rainclouds. In order to "see" through the nose of the plane, these electromagnetic waves must pass through the nose without producing any signal back towards the antenna or suffering much energy loss.
The nose covering over a radar is called the radome. Usually the radome is made of something transparent to the wavelengths used by the radar (aka microwave radiation). This is usually a lightweight plastic or foam. The key property is that the material has what we call a low permittivity. You can think of this as the material not interacting strongly with electromagnetic radiation.