Working principle of Doppler weather radar
Weather radar intermittently emits electromagnetic waves (called pulsed electromagnetic waves) into the air. Electromagnetic waves travel in a nearly straight path in the atmosphere, and the speed is close to that of light waves. On the propagation path, if a meteorological target is encountered, the pulse electromagnetic wave is scattered by the meteorological target, and the electromagnetic wave scattered back to the radar (called echo signal, also called backscattering) shows the spatial position of the meteorological target on the screen.
In radar detection, the spatial position of meteorological target is expressed by the linear distance r (also called oblique distance) from radar antenna to target, elevation angle and azimuth angle of radar antenna. The oblique distance r can be determined according to the propagation speed c of electromagnetic waves in the atmosphere and the time interval between the detection pulse and the echo signal. The propagation speed of electromagnetic wave in the atmosphere is slightly lower than that in vacuum, but it has little effect on the slope accuracy, so it is approximately represented by C.