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A Royal Air Force Boeing E-3 Sentry over North Yorkshire. An airborne early warning and control (AEW&C) system is an airborne radar early warning system designed to detect aircraft, ships, vehicles, missiles and other incoming projectiles at long ranges, as well as performing command and control of the battlespace in aerial engagements by informing and directing friendly fighter and attack ...
Side-looking airborne radar (SLAR) is an aircraft, [1] or satellite-mounted imaging radar pointing perpendicular to the direction of flight (hence side-looking). [2] A squinted (nonperpendicular) mode is also possible. SLAR can be fitted with a standard antenna (real aperture radar) or an antenna using synthetic aperture.
Aircraft interception radar, or AI radar for short, [1] is a British term for radar systems used to equip aircraft with the means to find and track other flying aircraft. [2] These radars are used primarily by Royal Air Force (RAF) and Fleet Air Arm night fighters and interceptors for locating and tracking other aircraft, although most AI ...
RAF Boeing E-3 Sentry AEW1 with rotating radar dome. The dome is 30 ft (10 m) across. The E-3 is accompanied by two Panavia Tornado F3. Early Warning (EW) Radar Radar Systems Ground Control Intercept (GCI) Radar; Airborne Early Warning (AEW) Airborne ground surveillance (AGS) Over-the-Horizon (OTH) Radar; Target Acquisition (TA, TAR) Radar Systems
AN/APQ-43 airborne radar exported to UK with British designation AI-22 for Javelin FAW.2 to FAW.6; AN/APQ-46 cancelled airborne radar for the proposed F3D-3; AN/APQ-50 improved AN/APQ-41 radar by Westinghouse Electric (1886) for F-4 Phantom II F3H Demon and F4D Skyray; AN/APQ-51 X band missile control radar by Sperry Corporation for F3H Demon ...
A U.S. Air Force E-8C Joint STARS, in flight. Airborne ground surveillance (AGS) refers to a class of military airborne radar system (Surveillance aircraft) used for detecting and tracking ground targets, such as vehicles and slow moving helicopters, as opposed to Airborne early warning and control, whose primary role is detecting and tracking aircraft in flight.
A. AI Mark IV radar; AI Mark VIII radar; AI.20 radar; AI.24 Foxhunter; Air-to-surface-vessel radar; Airborne early warning and control; Aircraft interception radar
The AN/APS-20 was an airborne early warning, anti-submarine, maritime surveillance and weather radar developed in the United States in the 1940s. Entering service in 1945, it served for nearly half a century, finally being retired in 1991.