Surveillance Radar
(a) Surveillance radars are divided into two general categories: Airport Surveillance Radar (ASR) and Air Route Surveillance Radar (ARSR).
(1) ASR is designed to provide relatively short-range coverage in the general vicinity of an airport and to serve as an expeditious means of handling terminal area traffic through observation of precise aircraft locations on a radarscope. The ASR can also be used as an instrument approach aid.
(2) ARSR is a long-range radar system designed primarily to provide a display of aircraft locations over large areas.
(b) Surveillance radars scan through 360 degrees of azimuth and present target information on a radar display located in a tower or center. This information is used independently or in conjunction with other navigational aids in the control of air traffic.
Ask it like you'd ask your CFI. Every FAR a student pilot needs, the full AIM, and NTSB Part 830 — verbatim, with links to the official source.
Open the FAR/AIM search →