| Dictionary: early warning radar |
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The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
a radar that is part of an early warning system
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An early warning radar is any radar system used primarily for the long-range detection of its targets, i.e., allowing defences to be alerted as early as possible before the intruder reaches its target, giving the defences the maximum time in-which to operate. This contrasts it with systems used primarily for tracking or gun laying, which tend to be shorter range but offer much higher accuracy.
The first early warning radars were the British Chain Home, the US CXAM (Navy) and SCR-270 (Army), and the German Freya. By modern standards these were quite short range, typically about 100 to 150 miles. This "short" distance is a side effect of radio propagation at the long wavelengths being used at the time, which were generally limited to line-of-sight. Although techniques for long-range propagation were known and widely used for shortwave radio, the ability to process the complex return signal were simply not possible at the time.
Starting in the 1950s, a number of over the horizon radars were developed that greatly extended detection ranges, generally by bouncing the signal off the ionosphere. Perhaps the most capable of these systems was the DEW Line, although other examples have since been built with even better performance. An alternate early warning design was the McGill Fence, which provided "line breaking" indication across the middle of Canada, with no provision to identify the targets exact location or direction of travel.
Today the early warning role has been supplanted to a large degree by
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