Radar Imagery

Functioning of the radar


A weather RADAR (Radio Detection And Ranging) is a wonderful instrument that pinpoints the location where precipitation occurs and gives an estimate of its intensity. A fast rotating antenna emits 600 to 1200 pulses per second. These pulses encounter waterdrops and are reflected back to the emitting antenna. Bigger drops in a large quantity will reflect at a higher intensity than small drops in small quantities. The different intensities are visualised on the radar image by different colours. Areas with a high reflectivity (red colour) help the airspace users to localise dangerous phenomena like thunderstorms, hail and microbursts.

Weather radar images on the website

  • RADAR Image R-125km : This radar image is updated every 10 minutes and shows the user the locations where rainfall is a possibility within a range of 125km around the radar in Brussels. The echoes on the image depict an estimation of the maximum amount of rainfall (mm/hr). One has to take into account the fact that the shown amount of rainfall does not necessarily correspond with the actual amount of rainfall on surface level. The cross-sections to the top and the right side of the radar image give an indication about the vertical spread (between 1km and 20km) of the maximum observed rainfall in, respectively, a West-East and a North-South
  • RADAR Image R-245km : This radar image is updated every 5 minutes and shows the user the locations where rainfall is a possibility within a range of 245 km around the radar in Brussels. The echoes on the image depict precipitation zones as a result of a scan through the atmosphere under an elevation angle of 0.5° (an oblique cut through the atmosphere). The echoes are reflectivity values (dBZ):
    • values lower than 20 dBZ are light rain;
    • values between 20 and 35 dBZ are moderate rain;
    • values above 35 dBZ are heavy rain or thunderstorms.
    Notice, the farther away the radar beam gets from the radar, the higher the beam is above the earth surface. The beam also broadens as it gets farther away from the radar. So the echoes at the edge of image appear less defined.
Video: the weather (5,23 Mb)
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