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Marine radar

Marine radar

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All edits by  Рома Баранов 

Edits on 28 Jan, 2022
Рома Баранов profile picture
Рома Баранов
edited on 28 Jan, 2022
Edits made to:
Timeline (+4 events) (+327 characters)
Article (+1852 characters)
Table (+3 rows) (+6 cells) (+293 characters)
Article

Marine radars are X band or S band radars on ships, used to detect other ships and land obstacles, to provide bearing and distance for collision avoidance and navigation at sea. They are electronic navigation instruments that use a rotating antenna to sweep a narrow beam of microwaves around the water surface surrounding the ship to the horizon, detecting targets by microwaves reflected from them, generating a picture of the ship's surroundings on a display screen.

Radar is a vital navigation component for safety at sea and near the shore. Captains need to be able to maneuver their ships within feet in the worst of conditions and to be able to navigate "blind", when there is no visibility at night or due to bad weather. In addition to vessel-based marine radars, in port or in harbour, shore-based vessel traffic service radar systems are used by harbormasters and coast guard to monitor and regulate ship movements in busy waters.

Radars are rarely used alone in a marine setting. A modern trend is the integration of radar with other navigation displays on a single screen, as it becomes quite distracting to look at several different screens. Therefore, displays can often overlay an electronic GPS navigation chart of ship position, and a sonar display, on the radar display. This provides a combined view of surroundings, to maneuver the ship.

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In commercial ships, radars are integrated into a full suite of marine instruments including chartplotters, sonar, two-way marine radio, satellite navigation (GNSS) receivers such as the US Global Positioning System (GPS), and emergency locators (SART). With digital data buses to exchange data, these devices advanced greatly in the early 21st century. For example, some have 3D displays that allow navigators to see above, below and all around the ship, including overlays of satellite imaging.

Table

Name
Role
LinkedIn

Christian Hülsmeyer

A German patent was issued on the application for the idea of ​​a radar dated April 30, 1904

Heinrich Hertz

Discovered the existence of electromagnetic waves In 1887

Popov, Alexander Stepanovich

Discovered the phenomenon of reflection of radio waves from the ship's hull In 1897

Timeline

February 26, 1935

One of the first devices designed for radar of air targets

April 30, 1905

Christian Hülsmeyer- A German patent was issued on the application for the idea of ​​a radar dated

1897

Popov, Alexander Stepanovich- discovered the phenomenon of reflection of radio waves from the ship's hull

1887

Heinrich Hertz- discovered the existence of electromagnetic waves

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