θ = 68 λ/ dwhere θ is the half-power beam width in degrees; namely the angle between the points on the reception pattern at which the received power is reduced 3 dB from the peak. You can see that an accurate directional beam would require an antenna sized about a hundred times the wavelength. For that reason, microwave frequencies are advantageous. As an example of frequencies now being used, police speed radar operates at 10.6 GHz. A horn reflector is actually a segment of a parabolic reflector. One other directional antenna is the helical antenna, which I confess is my favorite antenna type. Unfortunately, these are not useful in radar, since they are resonant and will "ring" under excitation of a transmitted radar pulse. One technique to enhance positional accuracy is called monopulse. Monopulse, first demonstrated at the Naval Research Laboratory during World War II, sends two beams in slightly different directions and then notes which direction has the most intense return signal. To do this in practice requires that the two signals have different polarization, so they can be distinguished from each other. When done correctly, radar resolution can be enhanced an order of magnitude to 0.01 degree accuracy, or a few tens of meters at a hundred kilometers.
![]() | SPS-49 air search radar antenna aboard the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln |
LOLA topographic map of the moon's southern hemisphere. The false colors indicate elevation: red areas are highest and blue lowest. (Figure: NASA/GSFC/MIT/SVS)
A team from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, presented their Lidar map of the moon at the 2010 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union, December 13-17, 2010, in San Francisco.[3] Lidar, of course, is radar that uses the optical portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. Lidar has the advantage, at least in the airless environment of the moon, of achieving very good positional accuracy with a small emitter. The NASA Lunar Orbiter Laser Altimeter (LOLA) splits a laser beam into five separate beams that propagate to the lunar surface. The transit time of the return light gives the distance to the lunar surface, and when the spacecraft's orbit is taken into account, it gives the surface topography. The reason for having five beams is that the beam pattern gives additional data about slope. Additionally, the spreading of the beams reveals surface roughness, and the intensity of the light echo reveals the surface reflectance.
The Lidar measurements performed over the course of the last year have produced three billion data points, and the experiment is expected to continue for another two years. The Lidar mapping has improved positional accuracy considerably over previous measurements, from kilometers down to a few tens of meters. The vertical accuracy of the map is about a meter. Previous maps had about a mile between data points. LOLA's data points are about 57 meters (187 feet) apart. This mapping has yielded at least one surprise. Shackleton crater was found to have slopes of 36 degrees over several kilometers, which is perilous terrain, to say the least.
Geophysics seems to be doing well. The program booklet for the 2010 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union, which contains titles and authors of papers, but not abstracts, was 560 pages![3]