Radar Horizon Calculator

Calculate radar line-of-sight horizon distance from antenna and target heights. Includes atmospheric refraction (k-factor), Fresnel zone, and target height lookup table.

About the Radar Horizon Calculator

The radar (or radio) horizon is the maximum distance at which a radar or radio signal can propagate in a straight line from an antenna to a target, limited by the curvature of the Earth. For standard atmospheric conditions, the refraction factor k = 4/3 extends the horizon about 15% beyond the geometric (optical) horizon.

This calculator computes the radar horizon distance from antenna height and target height, accounting for atmospheric refraction via the adjustable k-factor. It also calculates the geometric horizon (k=1) for comparison, the wavelength at the given frequency, and the first Fresnel zone radius at the horizon.

A target height table shows the maximum line-of-sight range for surface, 10m, 100m, 1km, and 10km target heights — essential for understanding detection envelopes. The refraction conditions table explains sub-refraction, standard, super-refraction, and ducting.

This tool is used by radar engineers, RF link designers, maritime navigators, and ATC planners to determine coverage limits.

Why Use This Radar Horizon Calculator?

Radar coverage analysis and RF link planning require accurate horizon calculations. This tool provides instant results with adjustable atmospheric conditions.

The target height table is particularly valuable for military radar coverage assessment and ATC surveillance planning. Keep these notes focused on your operational context. Tie the context to the calculator’s intended domain. Use this clarification to avoid ambiguous interpretation.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the antenna height above ground level.
  2. Enter the target height (0 for surface targets).
  3. Adjust the refraction factor k (default 4/3 for standard atmosphere).
  4. Optionally enter the radar frequency for wavelength/Fresnel calculations.
  5. Read the radar horizon distance in km, NM, and miles.
  6. Check the target height table for detection ranges at various altitudes.

Formula

d = √(2·k·Re·h_a) + √(2·k·Re·h_t). where Re = 6,371 km, k = 4/3 standard. Geometric (no refraction): k = 1. Simplified: d(km) ≈ 4.12·(√h_a + √h_t) for k=4/3, h in meters.

Example Calculation

Result: Radar horizon = 18.4 km (9.9 NM)

d = √(2 × 4/3 × 6371000 × 20) = √(339.8×10⁶) = 18,400 m = 18.4 km. With k=1: d = 16.0 km. Refraction adds 15%.

Tips & Best Practices

Practical Guidance

Use consistent units, verify assumptions, and document conversion standards for repeatable outcomes.

Common Pitfalls

Most mistakes come from mixed standards, rounding too early, or misread labels. Recheck final values before use. ## Practical Notes

Use concise notes to keep each section focused on outcomes. ## Practical Notes

Check assumptions and units before interpreting the number. ## Practical Notes

Capture practical pitfalls by scenario before sharing the result. ## Practical Notes

Use one example per section to avoid misapplying the same formula. ## Practical Notes

Document rounding and precision choices before you finalize outputs. ## Practical Notes

Flag unusual inputs, especially values outside expected ranges. ## Practical Notes

Apply this as a quality checkpoint for repeatable calculations.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the k-factor?

The k-factor accounts for atmospheric refraction bending radio waves downward. k = 4/3 (1.333) is the standard for temperate climates. k varies from ~0.7 (extreme sub-refraction) to infinity (ducting).

When does super-refraction occur?

Super-refraction (k > 4/3) happens when warm, dry air overlies cool, moist air — common over warm ocean surfaces. It extends radar range beyond normal but can create blind zones.

What is ducting?

Ducting occurs when the atmospheric refractive index decreases so rapidly with height that radio waves are trapped in a layer, bending downward more than the Earth curves. This can extend radar range by hundreds of km — or create complete detection failures at certain altitudes.

Does frequency affect the radar horizon?

The horizon distance is independent of frequency. However, frequency affects diffraction around the horizon, atmospheric absorption, and the Fresnel zone clearance required for practical link design.

How does this differ from the optical horizon?

Radio and optical horizons use the same geometry but different k-factors. For optics, k ≈ 1.06-1.08 (visible light refracts less than microwaves). For radio: k ≈ 4/3.

What about terrain?

This calculator assumes a smooth, spherical Earth. Terrain obstructions (hills, buildings) reduce the effective line of sight. For real link planning, use terrain profile tools with digital elevation models.

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