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Aesa Radar ” Uttam ” for Tejas MK-II been tested Air-to- Air mode

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Its not the AESA that is the checkmate from Tejas

Hi @Kinetic
LCA's AESA will be pretty advanced if we assume certain technologies from ashwin and arudhra project trickled down to L-273.For instance if we assume DBF to be present ,then i am afraid,there is nothing in the pakistani inventory that can ever match the characteristics of L-273.DBF provides unprecedented capabilities to an AESA in flexible beam control and multi tasking.It is what makes an AESA a "truly multi-purpose radar".
 
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Hi @Kinetic
LCA's AESA will be pretty advanced if we assume certain technologies from ashwin and arudhra project trickled down to L-273.For instance if we assume DBF to be present ,then i am afraid,there is nothing in the pakistani inventory that can ever match the characteristics of L-273.DBF provides unprecedented capabilities to an AESA in flexible beam control and multi tasking.It is what makes an AESA a "truly multi-purpose radar".
Ashwin is Pretty Decent Radar Its Tracking Range of 200 km for 2m2 Target is Astonishing . @amardeep mishra Please Explain How L-273 Can Achieve Such Parameters,Do LRDE have any Experience in Miniaturizing AESA Radars for Fighters Please Brief Me about the Process If you Can
 
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Hi,
That is probably because it is taking some time for the LRDE to develop it's air-to-ground modes,as they are inherently more challenging vis-a-vis air to air modes.For instance in A2G mode you need a lot of things from your radar like GMTI,SAR,Space time adaptive processing etc.Thankfully LRDE has gained enough experience with these modes after working on LC's slotted planar MMR and indigenous AEWCS. We can expect to see L273 radar flying in couple of years on test beds

@Donatello

Hi,
Does PAF have any plans of acquiring AESA for JF-1 later variants?and what will be the likely source?

We already got SAR tech from USA via ISRO-NASA civilian collaboration.
Dual use technology :D
 
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Bro , he wanted to know about ur opinion on lca ' s indigenous radar .
OK OK, got it.

There is limited info in public about Uttam AESA. As far as we know, its a small AESA radar to be fitted on LCA mk II with 100 km range. So the range OK, not good not bad. The EW capabilities will be awesome though.

@amardeep mishra
 
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OK OK, got it.

There is limited info in public about Uttam AESA. As far as we know, its a small AESA radar to be fitted on LCA mk II with 100 km range. So the range OK, not good not bad. The EW capabilities will be awesome though.

@amardeep mishra
It's AESA, the technology Itself is very potent almost impossible to jam its signals In comparison to mechanical Radars.Currently it uses 3-4KW peak power APU & 400-500 TR module's it will surely get mature with project development Cycle
 
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Give me source for US?

BTW, read about RISAT-2 and development of RISAT-1,

India to launch radar satellite in 2020
Published January 8, 2015 | By admin
SOURCE: MANORAMA ONLINE

radar-satellite.jpg.image.784.410.jpg


India will launch in 2020 an advanced satellite equipped with synthetic aperture radar, the first of its kind in the world, that the country is developing in collaboration with NASA, said Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) former chairman K.Radhakrishnan. Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) director Dr G.Satheesh Reddy said the “smart soldier” concept for the country’s armed forces was at a critical stage in its development. The two were showcasing India’s scientific achievement at the Youth Pravasi Bharatiya Divas.

The radar satellite was a key link in India’s space research collaboration with NASA. The satellite will incorporate advanced instruments to study in detail climate change, the melting of ice and glaciers, earthquakes, tsunamis, landslides and volcanoes, among others :D. The studies are important as these phenomena are still not fully understood or can by accurately predicted.

The satellite will use two different radar frequencies. The launch vehicle, the launch, the satellite bus, etc. will be India’s responsibility. NASA will develop the radar, the communications sub-system, and the GPS receiver, among others.

Your turn...giff sauce.
 
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India to launch radar satellite in 2020
Published January 8, 2015 | By admin
SOURCE: MANORAMA ONLINE

radar-satellite.jpg.image.784.410.jpg


India will launch in 2020 an advanced satellite equipped with synthetic aperture radar, the first of its kind in the world, that the country is developing in collaboration with NASA, said Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) former chairman K.Radhakrishnan. Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) director Dr G.Satheesh Reddy said the “smart soldier” concept for the country’s armed forces was at a critical stage in its development. The two were showcasing India’s scientific achievement at the Youth Pravasi Bharatiya Divas.

The radar satellite was a key link in India’s space research collaboration with NASA. The satellite will incorporate advanced instruments to study in detail climate change, the melting of ice and glaciers, earthquakes, tsunamis, landslides and volcanoes, among others. The studies are important as these phenomena are still not fully understood or can by accurately predicted.

The satellite will use two different radar frequencies. The launch vehicle, the launch, the satellite bus, etc. will be India’s responsibility. NASA will develop the radar, the communications sub-system, and the GPS receiver, among others.

Your turn...giff sauce.

Lol, thats about 2020, and its not USA that going to provide tech. of SAR to India.

India already developed its tech. for SAR, and its just a co-op development. But who helped India in past about developing Indian SAR tech.?

BTW, you remembered TecSAR? What Indian demanded in return?
 
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