qwsazxerfdcv
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One criticism I have heard about stealth fighters is they betray there position when turning on there radar to detect and track enemy planes. Is this a problem?
First off there are sophisticated electro-optical sensors (like the EO-DAS on the F-35, or the OLS on new Russian fighters), second-off AESA radars have Low Probability of Intercept operating modes (LPI) when they are much harder to detect.One criticism I have heard about stealth fighters is they betray there position when turning on there radar to detect and track enemy planes. Is this a problem?
Quick answer, no.One criticism I have heard about stealth fighters is they betray there position when turning on there radar to detect and track enemy planes. Is this a problem?
I'm surprised, I would have thought if a fighter could detect a signal that traveled some distance, reflected of a plane, and traveled back it would be much easier for the illuminated plane to detect the signal since its so much stronger.Quick answer, no.
Now the radar aboard an F-22 is an APG-77 AESA (Active Electronically Scanned Array) which, due to the nature of have AESA can function, has a LPI (Low Probability of Intercept) mode. Due to the multiple T/R (Transmission/Receive) modules within the AESA, and the fact that the beams these modules are electronically steerable and able to vary the frequency. In short, the radar can be setup to scan an area of airspace ahead of the F-22, and the radar can do so in a mannery which is unlikely to trigger alerts from the RWR (Radar Warning Receiver) of hostile aircraft, and even if the RWR does give a warning, it is quite unlikely that it would be able to triangulate the position of the emitting F-22.
There is a lot of background noise from natural and manmade sources that create confusion. Older radar designs used a regular series of pulses on one frequency and at constant strength that could be easily sorted out from the background by both the user and the target. In LPI systems each pulse is a different frequency over a wide range with no specific pattern or strength. The LPI radar knows when each pulse was transmitted and on what frequency so it can sort them out. The target can still detect the pulses but it is much harder to determine if they are manmade or natural phenomena. :unknownThanks for the replies
I'm surprised, I would have thought if a fighter could detect a signal that traveled some distance, reflected of a plane, and traveled back it would be much easier for the illuminated plane to detect the signal since its so much stronger.
That's indeed true and while radar technology has advanced, RWR technology did so as well. Todjaeger is however right that the information gathered by the RWR are not good enough to accurately target the aircraft, they can aid, but they would still require some support from other sensors. In other words LPI certainly works and as the name suggests it lowers the probability of detection, but it doesn't eliminate it.Thanks for the replies
I'm surprised, I would have thought if a fighter could detect a signal that traveled some distance, reflected of a plane, and traveled back it would be much easier for the illuminated plane to detect the signal since its so much stronger.
The kinds of opponents with that kind of technology and coordination, outside of NATO are who exactly?That's indeed true and while radar technology has advanced, RWR technology did so as well. Todjaeger is however right that the information gathered by the RWR are not good enough to accurately target the aircraft, they can aid, but they would still require some support from other sensors. In other words LPI certainly works and as the name suggests it lowers the probability of detection, but it doesn't eliminate it.
I am sure there is much that I do not know but I know that people have been working on this problem for many years. Most receivers are by nature narrow band and high gain. That gives you both good sensitivity and low noise to signal ratio. It also conserves the available spectrum so that many users can transmit and receive at the same time.That's indeed true and while radar technology has advanced, RWR technology did so as well. Todjaeger is however right that the information gathered by the RWR are not good enough to accurately target the aircraft, they can aid, but they would still require some support from other sensors. In other words LPI certainly works and as the name suggests it lowers the probability of detection, but it doesn't eliminate it.
That article pertains only to the application of spread spectrum to communications, it’s use in radar is probably completely different. :goodbadPulse to pulse frequency hopping, as it was once called, does decrees to some extent radar intercept probability but a simple spinning wideband receiver will easily give you a bearing to the radar source on a circular scope. Many analog systems like this were once produced exactly for this reaso, if there is not too many other targets in the area at the same time.
I recommend to get the basics of the theory try ABCs of Spread Spectrum - A Technology Introduction and Tutorial as a start.
To my knowledge there is no open source premier to spread spectrum applications in open sources for non-communication applications. What little I know comes from tacking a few oblique hints, and a few off the record conversation, and adding it to my knowledge when I once worked in Electronic Warfare.That article pertains only to the application of spread spectrum to communications, it’s use in radar is probably completely different. :goodbad
Still, it is a good educational article and web site.
Another area that may interest you about the intercept problem of how to detect an artificial signal from the background noise can be found by reviewing various search technics from the various SETI programs. Though here we are looking at a completely different set of assumptions, many of the physical difficulties of finding a signal in and among the different kinds of noise, be it natural or artificial, are much the same.qwsazxerfdcv & My2Cents, as a pleb myself, I see with rip's link that he alludes to and knows what he is talking about. If you delete communication and insert radar into most of the sentences, I think we will have a firm footing to how LPI radar can work
if you google "spread spectrim microwaves" this also gives a clue
Interesting that you should mention this. Some of these issues were some what address in other threads but I cannot recall their names. There are several systems under development that will supposedly be able to detect stealth air-craft passively. But the conversations were conducted ether by people who didn’t know very much about it or by people who used such complicated terminology that it very difficult for a non-expert to understand.Thanks for that, the mentioning of SETI reminded me of tech from some 20 yrs ago that went suddenly silent
the use of star/astral EMR used as passive reception and the interference of a platform interrupting the signals as it transverses, sort of like accoustic daylight in subs working on background emissions
It might be too hard to use in a moving platform, but I wonder if the computers are up to handling the data sets from enough to be functional in a fixed land based
SETI was looking for repeating signals. With LPI radar you are looking for non-repeating signals, or as close as the designer can come to that, it is like trying to prove a negative.Another area that may interest you about the intercept problem of how to detect an artificial signal from the background noise can be found by reviewing various search technics from the various SETI programs. Though here we are looking at a completely different set of assumptions, many of the physical difficulties of finding a signal in and among the different kinds of noise, be it natural or artificial, are much the same.
Finding the signal, unless it was bring beamed to a particular location, would not have been that difficult – it is encrypted, not invisible. Not being able to figure out that the source was moving relative to the stellar background and therefore must be in orbit shows a lack of understanding. But falling for it, failing to check and question, and reporting to the world at large, only the Press could pull that one off. :hahaSeveral years ago a Soviet radio astrometry group announced that they had detected a signal of extraterrestrial intelligence. It was an American spy satellite data link. The Soviet scientists were very smart guys, they were not dumb or they would not have been able to find the signal in the first place, but we are talking about hard signals to understand and identify.
A joke I assume? Or a typo? Don’t tell us -- it is more fun that way!In tactical situations where the analytical resources at hand, are far less than you would find at an astronomical lavatory, you begin to see the difficulty.
As to my mistake of the word lavatory, instead of laboratory, my dyslexia and spelling checker, strikes again.
SETI was looking for repeating signals. With LPI radar you are looking for non-repeating signals, or as close as the designer can come to that, it is like trying to prove a negative.
Finding the signal, unless it was bring beamed to a particular location, would not have been that difficult – it is encrypted, not invisible. Not being able to figure out that the source was moving relative to the stellar background and therefore must be in orbit shows a lack of understanding. But falling for it, failing to check and question, and reporting to the world at large, only the Press could pull that one off. :haha
A joke I assume? Or a typo? Don’t tell us -- it is more fun that way!![]()
Even if they were detecting the backscatter, the apparent point to origin would have been moving against the background, which would not be observable from short duration boservations (less than a month) for a distant source (i.e. the Oort Cloud or farther). Therefore the source must be local, i.e. a satelliteAs another factor to consider, is the spy satellite was not transmitting to a ground station but to higher orbiting relay satellite. This is true for a variety of reasons that I will let you do your own research to deduce. What the Soviet astronomers’ were able to detect was not a point source but back-scatter from a moving satellite transmitting to a different higher satellite moving against the background of celestial sources. Hence it was not as easy as you have assumed to identify the signal as a satellite source. As I said before the Soviet astronomers’ were not dumb, they just did not know what they were looking at.. It didn’t look human created to them but it was artificial hence their conclusion.
I do not have the necessary background information to say what information the Soviet Astronomers’ had, the kind or type of equipment which they used or the analytical methods they employed to come to their conclusions. After their error was revealed, as you might expect, they did not want to increases their notoriety and made no attempt to justify their mistake.Even if they were detecting the backscatter, the apparent point to origin would have been moving against the background, which would not be observable from short duration boservations (less than a month) for a distant source (i.e. the Oort Cloud or farther). Therefore the source must be local, i.e. a satellite