Here’s What You Need to Remember: An active radar homing missile differs from a semi-active radar homing missile in that the missile’s seeker has its own radar transmitter to accompany a receiver.
At the end of the Cold War, there were major revolutions in the technology used for aerial combat. The most visible one was stealth, with the iconic diamond shaped F-117 and B-2 stealth bombers and ...
The Rafale was the first European fighter to use a radar with an electronically scanned antenna, in the shape of the Thales RBE2. Technologically interesting, and with some powerful capabilities ...
The military use of radar has always had a yin-yang dynamic – as new forms of radar are developed, so too are new ways to jam them. A team of physicists at the University of Rochester has discovered ...
UK company's first airborne active electronically scanned array is aimed at helicopters, patrol aircraft and boats BAE Systems Avionics intends to offer active electronically scanned array (AESA) ...
A radar detection performance measurement campaign was conducted by the NATO Science and Technology Organization (STO) under the leadership of the Polish armed forces in September 2019. Hensoldt’s ...
Semi-Active Radar Homing Missiles are know for their limitations. Radar lock must be kept all the time, you can't attack more than one target at once. But can you launch more than one missile at the ...