India Radar, Sensors and Electronic Warfare Archive

Gessler

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On 26 August 2022, the Defence Research & Development Organization (DRDO) formally completed transfer of technology (ToT) for the production of the Uttam active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar to Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) in the presence of the senior leadership of the Indian Air Force (IAF). The Uttam, developed by DRDO’s Electronics and Radar Development Establishment (LRDE), Bengaluru, will equip the IAF’s Tejas Mk1A fighters that will begin to enter service from 2024. This development has taken place subsequent to the successful completion of the Uttam’s airborne test programme.

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via Kuntal Biswas

The indigenous Uttam AESA has been fully flight-tested for all air to air, air to ground, weather & terrain avoidance/terrain following modes. Following the successful completion of the baseline Uttam project, fire control radars (FCRs) derived from it are being progressed for the Tejas Mk1A, Tejas Mk2 and Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft Aircraft (AMCA) as a combined ‘mission mode’ programme given the commonality between them.

On the initiative of the IAF’s senior leadership, the development of a scaled-up version of the Uttam to equip the Su-30MKI fighter fleet has also begun. The IAF, pleased with the development and performance of the Uttam, will depute some Su-30 MKI units for the development, integration, flight-testing and certification of said radar. ‘The Su-30 is our frontline fighter and we want our own AESA radar on it’, a senior government source told DDR.


AMCA.JPG

Screengrab of AMCA Design Review model with FCR, via Manish Prasad (cleared for release)

As such, the lion’s share of development funding will be provided by the IAF for this effort, with DRDO providing the rest. Development of this scaled-up Uttam derivative i.e. for the Su-30 MKI will require 36-48 months, with flight testing estimated to begin after 24 months. Airborne testing is an extremely rigorous process that entails a variety of check points even if the same components are flying in other radar units on different aircraft.

Coming back to the Tejas programme, the Uttam derivative that will equip the Tejas Mk2 will be quite similar to the one designed for the Tejas Mk1A. Now, as far as the version that will equip the AMCA is concerned, while indigenous X-Band Transmit-Receive multi-modules (TRMMs) for the same are already under production, a full-scale prototype of the radar itself is yet to be produced. It is noteworthy that the business jet used for testing the Uttam baseline is being considered inadequate for serving as a test-bed for the AMCA-version and work is underway to modify a larger aircraft to serve as a new ‘hack’ for this purpose.

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Airbus A319 procured by DRDO to be modified into a Flying Test Bed (FTB)

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Gessler

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Some of the UTTAM's modes of operation revealed for public:

Uttam has over 16 different types of operational modes and the radar can operate in multiple modes simultaneously by changing modes pulse-to-pulse which gives the pilot exceptional situational awareness and mission flexibility.

1 Air-To-Air

▪️ TWS (Track While Scan): Combination of search and track, essentially a surveillance mode.
▪️ HPT – High priority Target: Dedicated tracking mode, also referred to as “Hard Lock”.
▪️ AACQ/ACM (Auto-Acquisition/Air Combat maneuvering): radar searches a certain area and detected targets are automatically locked on transferred to HPT allowing the pilot to fire missiles quickly- Rapid target engagement.
▪️ AJ (Anti-Jam): Rapid frequency changes and other techniques to cut through heavy jamming.
▪️ RA (radar altimeter): measures altitude of the aircraft.
▪️ Weather: Weather observation

2 Air-To-Sea

▪️ Sea TWS: Search and tracks targets on the water surface, high processing requirement to cut through the clutter. It also includes SSS (sea surface search)
▪️ RS (Range Signature): Generating 1D profile of sea target, essentially a ‘quick look’, assessing the area of interest in a target, such as its length, position of high reflectivity area
▪️ ISAR (Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar): Imaging the target for classification, RS and ISAR are usually coupled with an automatic classification library
▪️ STCT (Sea Target Continuous Track): Similar to air-to-air HPT but for sea targets

3 Air-To-Ground

▪️ AGR (Air-To-Ground Ranging): Radar uses a continuous single beam for ranging, similar to a laser rangefinder. Range information is used to assist gunfire (strafing run) and visual bombing.
▪️ RBM (Real Beam Mapping): Radar scans the terrain to generate a topographic map. Pilots can use this map for terrain avoidance. It allows the aircraft to fly low while avoiding collision with a feature or ground.
▪️ Terrain Avoidance- The valley in front of the aircraft is black indicating that there is no terrain at the current altitude
▪️ SAR/DBS/HRM (Doppler Beam Sharpening/ High-Resolution Mapping): Enhanced Imaging mode used for high-resolution imaging of ground. Since the actual aperture of radar is very small compared to wavelength and energy is spread in a wide area, DBS is used to enhance the resolution.
▪️ GMTI/GMTT (Ground Moving Target Tracing/Indication): Detection of a moving target on the ground, other objects such as trees and buildings are filtered out. These modes can be interleaved with RBM/SAR to produce terrain map and track the target at same time.

4 Navigation

▪️ Weather
▪️ Terrain Avoidance.
 

Zapper

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completed transfer of technology (ToT) for the production of the Uttam active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar to Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL)
I guess Astra Microwave will still be getting the production contract
 

Gessler

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I guess Astra Microwave will still be getting the production contract

The production of TRMs may yet be subcontracted to Astra. But the final integrator of the radar is definitely going to be HAL - they beat out BEL for the contract.
 

Zapper

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The production of TRMs may yet be subcontracted to Astra. But the final integrator of the radar is definitely going to be HAL - they beat out BEL for the contract.
I feel HAL is taking too much on their plate. The final assembly at the radar level should be done by Astra or BEL and HAL should only focus on integrating it into the designated fighter jet
 

Zapper

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Why the hell is India so slow in development and Integration of new systems?
Several factors but to state a few...allocation of funds, corruption, top brass's love for foreign systems in favor of kickbacks & commissions - this leads to these generals & decision makers attempting to derail or kill any competing indigenous products, foreign govt/middlemen/defense lobby etc

The development is not exactly slow in recent times but armed forces (particularly IA & IAF) have a tendency to constantly change the requirements and specs resulting in eventual delays which they sight as a reason to go for a foreign product
 

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Why the hell is India so slow in development and Integration of new systems?

Given its a continent of a country (population, diversity etc... that is still coming together and in process of gaining economic strength and long term rational psyche to pay for such things)....there is large glass half full vs half empty thing going on and which you see more of depends on perspective you have.

The half empty part (however large it is) is connected to same phenomenon you see in pak defence forums, twitterscape etc having an entrenched amount of self-hating Indians that enjoy being derelict stray dogs and enjoy (beyond all reason now) seeing their country being abused (or even participate in it avidly)....and enjoy it long term especially.

That complex gets laundered up a few levels in various ways, but it still persists in more important and ultimately impactful areas (whatever your perspective is in the end)....and takes it toll where competence, realism and self-belief is required.

Where the raw buffet of options to explore was made much more restrictive (mostly by outside pressure hand), competence gets forced quicker and harder lot more (hence the success areas in missiles, space, nuclear, radars and various other disciplines relatively speaking).

Where that buffet is much more expansive, lot of Indians will simply choose easy and callous street (and this means doing things as inefficiently as possible to maximise their short term gain)....because something like stoicism is simply not present in their psyche in even a minimal amount.

As India grows and matures though, this will hopefully self-correct to a better balance (i.e as low prevalence as possible of the degenerate self-hate corruptive psyche and more importantly its ability to exist and perpetuate in important organs and vessels of consequence to entirety) than has existed and exists now.
 
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Rodeo

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What EOTS system do your national helicopters use? Does DRDO have Common Aperture EOTS systems in service? If there's can you give links so I can inform myself. And the sensor that you shared a picture of has HD Thermal Camera. Can you give info about the company's FPA manufacturing capabilities? For instance, do they have local cooled MCT detector production or are they working on it? Thanks.
 

Nilgiri

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What EOTS system do your national helicopters use? Does DRDO have Common Aperture EOTS systems in service? If there's can you give links so I can inform myself. And the sensor that you shared a picture of has HD Thermal Camera. Can you give info about the company's FPA manufacturing capabilities? For instance, do they have local cooled MCT detector production or are they working on it? Thanks.

There is no EOTS on the helicopters yet I believe. EOTS research is underway for AMCA etc. first:


This may see adoption on other platforms with time too.

Indian Helis etc use conventional sensor pods that keep the various sensors discrete.

MCT research and production has been ongoing since the ~ 80's. Here is a paper (from 2003) on some details:


Some info on FPGA:


@Zapper , @Rajendra Chola and others might have more to add.
 

Nilgiri

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Just realised you mean FPA (focal plane array) rather than FPGA heh. It became clear once I read more into the paper I posted.

As for local RnD and production of FPA, I beileve many components are still imported, but there is a drive to make the base production for these too.... I found this for example (its a preview behind a paywall though):


I forgot to tag @Gessler
 
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