India's homegrown light combat aircraft, the Tejas Mk-II, is set to take a major step forward by featuring a gallium nitride (GaN)based fire control radar, the Uttam Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA). This development is a significant achievement for India's aerospace sector and demonstrates the country's increasing independence in defence technology.
The Uttam AESA radar, developed by the DRDO, will be the first GaN-based fire control radar to be used on an Indian fighter jet. Compared to older gallium arsenide (GaAs) radars, GaN technology offers better performance, including longer range, greater accuracy and stronger resistance to electronic interference. This gives the Tejas Mk-II a major edge in aerial combat, allowing it to detect, and track, multiple targets at once, even in tough conditions.
The Uttam AESA radar is typically installed in the nose cone of the aircraft, also commonly called the radome-a combination of 'radar' and 'dome'―which is a protective, aerodynamic cover that shields the radar system from weather and environmental damage while allowing radar signals to pass through without interference.
This location, that is, the radome, provides the radar with an optimal forwardfacing position, allowing it to scan, and track, targets over a wide area in front of the aircraft. The radome is being developed by National Aeronautical Laboratory (NAL)
TEJAS MK-II'S Cutting-edge Radar Capabilities
The National Aerospace Laboratories (NAL), in its latest annual report, announced a major achievement in the development of India's light combat aircraft (LCA), the Tejas Mk-II. According to the report, NAL has successfully completed the structural design and analysis of the radome's composite structure and its related components for the Mk-II's AESA radar. This accomplishment has passed the critical design review (CDR), marking an important step forward in the project.
Esta historia es de la edición November 2024 de Geopolitics.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición November 2024 de Geopolitics.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
THE NEW WAVE OF MARINE LANDING CRAFT.
BAE Systems' new Littoral Strike Craft combines advanced stealth, comfort, and modularity to redefine modern amphibious mission capabilities.
PROVEN AIP FOR S80 SUBMARINES
The BEST AIP system is capable of operating at any depth and in all operational conditions, allowing it to adapt to any Navy mission and making it the most advanced AIP system on the market.
SHAPING THE FUTURE OF AI SECURE, SCALABLE, AND INNOVATIVE
Tardid leverages modular AI designs, robust cybersecurity, and adaptability to deliver secure and scalable solutions, integrating emerging technologies and refining strategies through realworld deployments, shares AASTHA VERMA, Chief Operating Officer, Tardid Technologies, with Geopolitics
TOT-AN IMPERATIVE FOR SUBMARINE MANUFACTURING
India's transition from offset strategies to fostering self-reliance through technology transfer (TOT) and local assembly highlights the significance of global collaborations like thyssenkrupp Marine Systems in shaping a robust, indigenised defence ecosystem, a perspective shared by KHALIL RAHMAN, CEO, thyssenkrupp Marine Systems India.
ENHANCING INDIAN NAVAL AVIATION
JYOTI SINGH reports how a powerful Indian naval air arm will prove to be the biggest seabased conventional level deterrence, both for the tactical and strategic battlefields
PROJECT-751-30 YEARS ON
India's ambitious Project-751, aimed at procuring six advanced submarines, remains stalled nearly three decades after its inception.
WINGS OVER THE OCEAN
Indian Naval Aviation is dramatically upgrading its combat potency with its latest inductions, writes Atul Chandra
HOW INDIA IS RESHAPING REGIONAL DETERRENCE, MARITIME DOMINANCE
In the theatre of modern geopolitics, control over the seas is synonymous with strategic dominance. With its vast coastline and critical position in the Indo-Pacific, India has always recognised the importance of maritime strength, outlines GIRISH LINGANNA
BUILDERS NAVY
The Indian Navy's modernisation efforts are picking up steam, with domestic shipyards running at full capacity, reports MIKE RAJKUMAR
THE NAVY'S NEED FOR SUBMARINES
While aircraft carriers have their place, submarines provide India with a more flexible, cost-effective, and survivable option for projecting power and maintaining deterrence in a complex and evolving strategic environment, argues AMIT GUPTA