I will give you some of Indonesian indigenous radars
1. Naval Radar made by Indonesian private owned electronics company
The Director is woman actually, Wiwiek Astuti
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Indonesia equips frigates, corvette with stealth radars
Ridzwan Rahmat, Singapore - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
14 April 2014
The Indonesian Navy (Tentara Nasional Indonesia - Angkatan Laut: TNI-AL) will equip a total of four Ahmad Yani (Van Speijk)-class guided missile frigates and one Kapitan Pattimura (Parchim I)-class corvette with low-probability-of-intercept (LPI) naval radars.
The radars will be built by Indonesian naval sensor manufacturer PT Infra RCS, company officials told [i>IHS Jane's on 11 April.
The company describes its equipment, the IRCS LPI Radar, as a stealthy sea-based X-band (SBX) radar with frequency modulated continuous wave technology.
"It has a maximum power output of only 10 W, making it quiet and virtually invisible to radar warning receivers on enemy vessels", said Prihatno Susanto, Technical Advisor for the company. "This allows our warships to detect hostile surface combatants without being discovered".
The IRCS LPI Radar has an effective range of 24 n miles and is equipped with tracking software known as Maritime Tracking Aid that allows for automatic radar plotting aid functionality. The system's antenna rotates at 20 rpm and has a gain of about 30dB.
The radar is available as a stand-alone system but can also be integrated with a vessel's electronic chart display and information system (IRCS) and combat management system.
The vessels now equipped with the radar are the guided missile frigates KRI
Ahmad Yani and KRI
Abdul Halim Perdanakusuma. Both began upgrade works in December 2013. Undergoing the equipment fixture currently are similar vessels in class KRI
Yos Sudarso , KRI
Oswald Siahaan and the Kapitan Pattimura-class corvette KRI
Sultan Taha .
Besides LPI naval radars, the company has also won a contract to equip
Oswald Siahaan and
Yos Sudarso with naval electronic support measures (ESM) systems that can detect electromagnetic emissions from electronic devices on enemy ships such as radar, communications equipment, jammers and missile targeting systems.
"The IRCS ESM has electronic intelligence (ELINT) capabilities that can pick up signals emitted by hostile warships from up to 90 n miles away via a passive radar", said Susanto. "Once these electromagnetic emissions are detected, a computer software that comes with the system will be able to identify, classify and pin-point the exact location of the source for commanders to take action."
The company has indicated that it is currently embarking on an effort to market both systems internationally.
Indonesia equips frigates, corvette with stealth radars - IHS Jane's 360
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2. 200 km 2 D surveilance radar developed by state owned electronics company, PT LEN Industry
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www.len.co.id
3. Passive radar, Bandung Institute of Technology
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4. SAR Radar Development. There is one Indonesian researcher, Prof Josaphat Tetuko Sumantri get funded by Japan to develop SAR Radar. He is still working for Indonesian government as researcher for SAR radar research in Bandung Institute of Technology and Professor in University of Indonesia. Here is the website and you can see some of his research
www.jmrsl.jp
Short Biodata
Josaphat was born in Bandung, Indonesia in 1970. He received the B.Eng. and M.Eng. Degrees in electrical and computer engineering (subsurface radar systems) from Kanazawa University, Japan, in 1995 and 1997, respectively, and the Ph.D. degree in artificial system sciences (applied radio wave and radar systems) from Chiba University, Japan, in 2002.
From 2002 to 2005, he was a Lecturer (Post-doctoral Fellowship Researcher) with the Center for Frontier Electronics and Photonics, Venture Business Laboratory, Chiba University, Japan. From 2005 to 2013, he was an Associate Professor (permanent staff) with the Center for Environmental Remote Sensing, Chiba University, where he is currently a Full Professor (permanent staff). He is Head Department of Environmental Remote Sensing and Head Division of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Graduate School of Integrated Science and Technology, Chiba University in 2019-2020.
His research interest are theoretically scattering microwave analysis and its applications in microwave (radar) remote sensing, especially synthetic aperture radar and subsurface radar (VLF), including InSAR, DInSAR and PS-InSAR, analysis and design of antennas for mobile satellite communications and microwave sensors, development of microwave sensors, including synthetic aperture radar (SAR) for unmanned aerial vehicle, aircraft, and microsatellite.
He published about 700 journal and conference papers, and tens book related wave analysis, SAR, and small antenna. He is General Chair of The 7th Asia-Pacific Conference on Synthetic Aperture Radar (APSAR 2021) at Bali, Indonesia and more than 200 Invited Talks and Lectures related synthetic aperture radar and its applications. He is co-leader of Working Group on Remote Sensing Instrumentation and Technologies for Unmanned Aerial Vehicles of IEEE GRSS,
Technical Committee on Instrumentation and Future Technologies (IFT-TC).
He is member of international and domestic organizations, reviewer of journals, and organizations. He received many awards and research grants related his researches and studies, and promoted many students from around the world.and as a
Visiting Lecturer/Professor in many Universities etc.
He manages Josaphat Microwave Remote Sensing Laboratory (JMRSL), Center for Environmental Remote Sensing (CEReS), Chiba University, Japan. His laboratory promotes the education and research to develop the internationally technologies and sciences on microwave remote sensing. He always encourages the undergraduate and postgraduate students to know the microwave phenomenons and to be familiar with the interaction between microwave and natural matters (i.e. vegetation, artificial materials, earth surface, snow), therefore they could develop original methods or sensor during studying in the courses.
www.jmrsl.jp