Iff Past Present Future
Iff Past Present Future
Iff Past Present Future
of
Secondary Radar
Ed Gellender
Guidelines
•There is a lot of material to cover.
•This subject would make a good 15 week course
(although I don’t think there is such a course). We
have an hour or two. It has to be a “mile wide and an
inch deep.”
•I am putting understanding over accuracy. Do not
bother calling me out on my lies; God will surely
punish me for this.
•Time permitting, I will try to take brief questions
•We will primarily cover current work in IFF, but a little
history adds a lot of perspective. Upcoming changes
are briefly addressed.
Chapter 1: How did it get started?
1939 – 1942: Radar goes to War
•“Radio Detection and Ranging”
•During “the Blitz,” the Chain Home System gives London
warning of incoming bombers to ready defenses.
•Indicated presence, range and direction of incoming
aircraft (actually radar echoes from hunks of metal in the
air)
-5
Sum 1090
Diff 1090
-10
-15
dBi
-20
-25
-30
-35
-40
-180 -130 -80 -30 20 70 120 170
Azimuth degrees
Representative early Radar Display
1944: A war of competing technologies
•Radars proliferate over the entire spectrum
•More advanced radars use different frequencies for different
applications
•Both sides learn how to exploit the other’s systems
•Becomes too complex for radar repeaters to accommodate all
radars
•Allies dedicate specific frequencies to IFF
•Controllers get 1030 MHz Interrogators
•Aircraft get transponders that reply on 1090 MHz (squawk)
•Still in use today
•Add individual aircraft identification number (squawk code)
•Pulse Amplitude Modulation – A series of 1 uS pulses
•Interrogation: Two pulses, closely spaced
•Reply: Two widely spaced pulses that bracket a series of 12
slots
•If a slot has a pulse, it is a 1; if not it is a 0
Chapter 2: Civil Air Traffic Control
from 1960 until today
Philosophy 101
•How Safe Does the Air Traffic Control System Have to
Be?
•Taking the kids to see Grandma? ….
•That is what “Failure is not an Option” REALLY
means!
•Some years there are zero commercial air fatalities
•We have achieved near perfection….
•DON’T BE THE ONE WHO MESSES IT UP
•Events like Malaysia Air 370 are the exceptions that
prove the rule
Alphabet Soup - Acronyms
•ATCRBS (“at–crabs”)
•Air Traffic Control Radar Beacon System
•Overall FAA Civil Air Traffic Control
•En-route Control Centers
•Maintain radar/IFF control of aircraft at
altitude across the country
•TRACON (“tray–kon”)
•Terminal Radar Approach Control
•Specific patterns for departure and approach
•Different controllers assigned different patterns
Basic IFF Modes
•Mode 3 - Aircraft Identification
•Crew enters assigned 4 digit octal number code into
transponder
•3 bits per digit, 0000-7777, 4096 possibilities
•A few special codes are reserved:
• Emergency, radio failure, hijack; non-controlled
•Mode C - Aircraft Altitude
•Height finding techniques are complex and not
accurate enough, so we need something better
•Oh, right … We have access to the altimeter
•Same as Mode 3, but 12 bits of gray coded
data
Interrogation Signals-in-Space
•Interrogation
•PAM - Two 1 uS pulses separated by:
•(Mode 1: 3 uS – discussed soon)
•(Mode 2: 5 uS – discussed soon)
•Mode 3: 8 uS
•Mode C: 21 uS
•Replies
•Same Pulse modulation as interrogation
•Two “bracket” pulses straddle a series of twelve
slots
• If a pulse is in a slot it is a 1; otherwise a 0
•All replies are in the same format; Interrogator
matches the reply to the mode just interrogated
Range Calculation
•Determining aircraft range from interrogator
• (Don’t be smug; you didn’t always know this either)
•Interrogations go out at the speed of light
•Transponders reply in exactly 3 uS
•Replies go back at the speed of light
•Interrogator calculates range from total round-trip time
•Range can be calculated quite accurately
•PRF – Radar / IFF Pulse Repetition Frequency
•We know roughly how far we can detect aircraft
•After enough time has passed that we have seen up to and
above that range, we can start over again
•The net result is that there are many transmissions while the
antenna beam passes any one aircraft.
•The resulting rate of transmissions is known as the Pulse
Repetition Frequency (PRF).
•Sometimes it is called PRI (…interval) or PRP (…period)
Limitations:
•Multipath
•At radio frequencies the world is a hall-of-mirrors;
They bounce off everything (picket-fencing on your
car radio, anyone?)
•Each transmission can arrive via several different
paths at different times
•The fastest one is always the right one – the
straightest path
•Multipath affects both uplink and downlink
•Interrogators have to remove redundant responses.
Ain’t easy, but it can be done.
More Limitations
•FRUIT
•Transponders reply to any interrogator they hear
•Question: Is that reply meant for me or someone else???
•The reply clutter I don’t want is called FRUIT
•High traffic density can result in enough FRUIT to overload the
air traffic control system. Serious issue for the FAA.
•DE-FRUITING
•Each target is interrogated many times in an antenna pass
•Proper replies are always very close in range
•Adjacent replies within range tolerance are accepted
•Lonely, one-of-a-kind replies are rejected. (like “Mean
Girls”?)
•Different interrogators CANNOT be synchronous for this to
work
•Randomly staggered PRFs make sure it doesn’t happen
Features - Sidelobe Suppression
•Let’s look at the antenna pattern again (repeated next slide)
•Notice the green main antenna pattern has high gain only
over a narrow angle
•Notice the little “bumps” of lower but finite gain – sidelobes
•If a plane is close enough, it may be picked up on a sidelobe
…. at the wrong angle!
•Observe that the red auxiliary antenna pattern exceeds the
green main pattern everywhere except the main lobe; It
especially covers the sidelobes.
•Interrogator (uplink) sidelobe suppression (ISLS)
•Remember I said there are two interrogation pulses? I lied.
•A second transmitter sends a third pulse to the auxiliary
antenna
•Transponder only accepts signals stronger than this pulse
•Thus, only signals coming in the main lobe are processed
•This technique eliminates loads of unnecessary FRUIT
•Not using ISLS is considered so selfish it is now illegal
Representative IFF Antenna Pattern
Sum Difference Full Antenna pattern
-5
Sum 1090
Diff 1090
-10
-15
dBi
-20
-25
-30
-35
-40
-180 -130 -80 -30 20 70 120 170
Azimuth degrees
More Features – RSLS and GTC
•Receiver Sidelobe suppression (RSLS)
•Same idea as ISLS, but on the downlink side
•We need a second receiver on the auxiliary antenna
•So, which antenna is picking up the stronger signal?
•If it is the auxiliary antenna, ignore the response.
•Eliminates more FRUIT, clutter and junk
•Gain – Time Constant (GTC) (curve next slide)
•IFF is a cooperative system with all parameters constant.
•We can predict signal strength vs. range pretty closely
•Signal drops at a predictable -6dB for every doubling of distance
• (Radar guys – Eat your heart out!)
•We allow a few dB margin; Anything less is dropped
•We eliminate still more junk from further processing.
GTC Curve
Azimuth (bearing) – legacy determination
•The antenna beam can be up to 10 degrees wide
•We need to know target direction more precisely than
that
•There are two techniques for getting the beam center;
Processing selects the best one for each target on each
antenna scan
•Legacy Beamsplit Azimuth
•Rugged, reliable and fairly accurate
•See antenna position where the target first appears
•See antenna position where the target disappears
•Split the difference
Newer Monopulse Azimuth
•We also use the auxiliary antenna and receiver for monopulse azimuth
•Look at the center of the antenna pattern again.
•(See expanded view on the next slide)
•Note that the auxiliary pattern nulls where the main lobe peaks
•Note that the pattern is symmetrical around main beam center
•SUM and DIFFERENCE monopulse channels
•The main antenna is the SUM channel; aux is the DIFF channel
•These antenna patterns are stored in the IFF processor as “OBA tables”
•If the SUM signal is, say, 10.3 dB above the DIFF signal, the OBA table tells
us the offset from beam center (boresight) is, say, 2.55 degrees
•The DIFF channel signals flip phase on different sides of the null; Used to
determine whether it is 2.55 degrees CW or CCW from boresight
•Even one reply will yield an azimuth (We usually average all we get)
•This is very accurate for strong signals
•With weak (long-range) signals, the null becomes noisy
•The better of the two (beamsplit or monopulse) resulting from each
beampass on a target is used.
Monopulse antenna pattern
IFF signals sent to the displays
•Raw (“code”) video
•Receiver detected output with no computer processing
•In the beginning, this was all you had to work with
•The next slide repeats the old radar display
•Note the arcs (“bananas”) represent the antenna main lobe
•It is crude compared to what we are used to seeing
•But when things get ugly, it can be a godsend
•Target Reports
•Computer processing determines what is a real target
•The range, azimuth, and code are forwarded to the displays
•The displays generate symbology over the code video that is
useful to the operator (usually airline, flight number and
altitude)
•Computers in modern displays determine velocity vectors and
add additional symbology to assist the operator
•Two slides down shows typical modern display symbology
Representative early Radar Display
Modern ATC display
Chapter 3: Military Command and
Control (including mobile platforms);
1960 until today
Mobile Radar / IFF Platforms
•Only the military has airborne Command and Control
•ADS-B Squitters
•Mode S transponders broadcast unsolicited transmissions several times per
second, including the aircraft ID and its position.
•These broadcasts are called “squitters”
•Squitters are useful for collision avoidance systems, etc.
Mobile Mode S Platforms (E-2D, AWACS)
•Mode S from a moving platform … Another fine mess you got us
into, Ollie
•Unlike aircraft identifiers, Mode S never allocated interrogator
codes for visitors (“jes’ passin’ thru, ma’am”), so there aren’t
enough to go around.
• Current philosophy is that all mobile platforms share one
common identifier.
•If two interrogators with the same code are nearby, the first
one to acquire a new target locks it out, thus making it
invisible to the second interrogator. That is unacceptable.
•We can turn off lockout on our interrogations, but then every
AllCall causes pandemonium. Now what?
•We have come up with some ideas; None are elegant.
Mode S Mobile Acquisition
•Acquisition via Squitter (non-proprietary idea)
•All it takes is one squitter to give us what we need to start
RollCalling a target (unique ID and location)
•However, our antenna beam is too narrow and moves too
fast; It slips between most of the squitters.
•It can take quite a few antenna scans to catch ‘em all
•If an E-2D is set to passively receive and store squitter
information while travelling out to station, upon arrival it
should have almost all the targets pre-loaded in the tracker.