Design Article
Understanding Mode S technology
Barry Beasley, Aeroflex
10/10/2012 11:25 AM EDT
This article provides an introduction to some important SSR (Secondary Surveillance Radar) concepts that lie at the heart of Mode S.
Introduction
One of the primary purposes of the Mode S system is to resolve the operational problems associated with the legacy Mode A/C or ATCRBS (Air Traffic Control Radar Beacon System). Use of Monopulse interrogators allow the separation of closely spaced targets in azimuth, and reduce the number of transponder replies required, for determining the azimuth angle of the target. This in turn reduces transmission occupancy, allowing more targets to be tracked within a given airspace. However, several problems still remain, and these are now addressed in more details.
Mode S interrogation and reply formats
Refer to Figure 1. The Mode S selective interrogation transmitted on a 1030 MHz carrier comprises a two pulse preamble, followed by a data lead in period. A sync phase reversal in the 1030 MHz carrier references the start of a 56-bit or 112-bit DPSK (Differential Phase Shift Keying) data block. The second preamble, pulse P2, will suppress Mode A/C transponders from replying.

Figure 1: Mode S selective interrogation format

Figure 2: Mode S reply format

Figure 3: ATCRBS/Mode S All-Call format

