Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: Low loss for weak (low-level) echo signals and high loss for the strong transmit pulse
Explanation:
Introduction:In pulsed radar, a duplexer must protect the sensitive receiver during the high-power transmit pulse and then admit very weak echoes a short time later. Gas-discharge TR tubes (or modern limiter diodes) provide level-dependent isolation.
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:
During the transmit pulse, the TR device ionizes or otherwise switches into a high-loss/reflective state, isolating the receiver front end. Between pulses, with only weak echo levels present, the device remains non-conducting (or unswitched), presenting low insertion loss so echoes reach the receiver with minimal attenuation.
Step-by-Step Solution:
1) Transmit interval: incident power is very high → TR tube conducts → high attenuation to receiver path.2) Listen interval: only weak echoes arrive → device remains off → low insertion loss.3) Net effect: receiver is protected yet remains sensitive post-pulse.Verification / Alternative check:
Limiter transfer curves show a knee beyond which insertion loss increases rapidly with input power; below the knee, loss is minimal.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Common Pitfalls:
Assuming all duplexers are purely passive hybrids; TR limiters provide the level-dependent isolation crucial for radar.
Final Answer:
Low loss for weak (low-level) echo signals and high loss for the strong transmit pulse
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