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Advanced Radar Research Center

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Advanced Radar Research Center (ARRC) is an academic radar program within the United States. Its core mission revolves around the realm of interdisciplinary research, where it researches radar solutions to address a myriad of complex societal challenges.

Born in 2005, the ARRC found its roots at the University of Oklahoma (OU), and it now resides within the Radar Innovation Lab (RIL). While its inception was primarily in the pursuit of advancing radar technology for scientific exploration, the ARRC has since broadened its horizons, embracing a diverse array of radar applications and the field of applied electromagnetics.

Radar Innovation Lab

In Norman, Oklahoma.[1] The Executive Director of ARRC is Dr. Robert D. Palmer.

The ARRC has 20 faculty members, 16 full-time technical staff, and over 70 interdisciplinary graduate students. Active areas of research include: weather/atmospheric radar, severe storms/hydrometeorology, remote sensing, defense radars/sensors, signal processing/AI/ML, spectrum sharing, applied electromagnetics/antennas, automotive radar, biomedical sensors, UAS, CUAS, rapid prototyping, and microwave/mmW components/packaging.


References

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  1. ^ "University of Oklahoma: Director, Advanced Radar Research Center".
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