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Class Information
This course comprises primarily lecture material supplemented by readings
from class handouts and other references. Lecture notes organized by topic will
be handed out routinely, constituting a text. Special handouts will also be
distributed from time to time. Reading assignments will be given for most class
meetings. These may be from handouts or from other sources, most of which will
be on reserve at Terman Engineering Library. Problem assignments will generally
be given on Thursdays and collected on Thursdays, with the graded work handed
back by the following Monday or Wednesday. Cooperation on homework is
encouraged, but you are expected to keep the work on an approximately equal
basis. We plan one midterm exam plus a final term project. Grades will be based
on the totality of your work, with weightings of approximately 40% on the final
project, 25% on the midterm, 30% on homework, and up to 5% extra credit problems
and so forth.
A course syllabus and a list of reference books are attached. Assigned
readings will usually be from this list. You may also find that a particular
book presents material in ways you can more easily understand-so look around for
a book with which you are comfortable. There is a number of works on this
general subject area at the bookstore. Although there is no specific course text
apart from the lecture note handouts, some recommended books are: (i) Modern
Radar System Analysis by David K. Barton; (ii) Bistatic Radar by N.J. Willis;
(iii) High Resolution Radar by D.R. Wehner; (iv) Aspects of Modern Radar by Eli
Brookner (ed.); and (v) Synthetic Aperture Radar by Curlander and McDonough. In
the past the book Radar Principles, by Levanon, has been used as a text; this
work provides an overview that roughly parallels portions of this course. Some
students find Levanon a useful adjunct, but we do not recommend it.
"Radar" is an exciting, eclectic subject that incorporates concepts and
results from a range of electrical engineering and other disciplines to
synthesize new systems and techniques for remote sensing and measurements. The
result is a field that stands alone as a specialty, with very wide applications
in science and engineering. At the same time, many techniques first considered
as radar have found uses in a variety of other fields such as seismic surveying,
acoustic imaging, and underwater sound. Your instructors hope you will find the
course interesting, satisfying, and useful. Here we will take as broad a view as
possible, focusing on underlying principles to introduce and build competence in
this field.
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