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by semi-extrinsic
738 days ago
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I'm pretty sure this was a typo, so s/radar/weather/ . For reference, a weather radar operates in Doppler mode with return signal coming from Rayleigh scattering of raindrops, so it's on the 3cm - 10cm wavelength. You are talking about something like a 5 meter diameter antenna dish that weighs half a tonne, which is on an elevation-azimuth motorized mount, in a 7 meter diameter radome, with peak transmit power of 250 000 W. Of course you can buy one yourself, if you have the space, electrical power and money for it - ballpark 1.5 mill. USD. |
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C-band weather radars existed since forever, first using magnetron transmitters and now solid-state amplifiers, though there are still a lot of new magnetron-based systems being installed, with the downside that magnetron pulses are practically impossible to modulate to perform advanced radar techniques that improve different aspects performance. There are also X-band weather radars, which operate on higher frequencies and use more modestly sized antennas (but still larger than you'd like to have on your house roof). They are more limited in range (100km-ish max) due to high attenuation and mostly used at airports, offshore oil rigs and windfarms and similar installations that mostly interested in precise local weather. They are still several hundred thousand bucks.