@jasonRF thanks for stepping by and no you did not derail anything, I appreciate your input.
@sophiecentaur well it's one thing for you to tell me that I'm not up to task (which you might be right about) but it's another to answer other people's input in this thread by telling them what should I be told and what not, I don't find that constructive or helpful.
In fact my main inquiry was about the type of antenna used in this narrow horizontal rotating type of radar and judging by all the input so far it seems it is indeed a slotted waveguide. Which would explain the geometry of the rotating part of the radar. So a slotted metallic waveguide coated with external plastic to keep dust and moisture out, much like the parabolic link antennas used on radio towers as communication channels between towers as far as I know.
@davenn since you posted the pictures let me ask, the rotating flange part of the radar , where the stationary part goes over to the moving/rotating part , I suppose there is a small separation there between the stationary and the moving part, but in order to keep the integrity of the EM wave within the waveguide the separation has to be smaller than 1/4th of the wavelength?
Well in the case of a parabolic antenna , they have a feedhorn in front of the antenna which directs the EM waves against the antenna dish which then forms their shape, the return EM signal is then transmitted/reflected in reverse and picked up by the "dish head" as satellite technicians like to call it, and can then be received,
can someone explain how the rotating slot antenna functions as a receiver? Obviously a radar would be useless if it just radiated and did not receive.
My own guess would be that the slots work both ways, they do radiate as the E field changes over the gap due to changing current, but an outside E field would cause the gap to develop charge across it's long sides and a changing current, much like with light the diffraction pattern is the same irrespective if one changes the side from which the wave comes.