Northrop Offers New Intel Radar

Northrop Offers New Intel Radar

During the days of the Cold War, intelligence analysts tracked Soviet missile deployments and launches, as well as mass maneuvers, using the technological wonders of change detection, the arcane art of looking at satellite and U-2 photos to see what had moved where and how fast they were moving.

Analysts watched shadows, pondered piles of earth and eyed gantries and missiles as the Cold War waxed and waned. While resolutions improved and the US launched bus-sized radar satellites to better track what was happening, some goals remained unattainable. One of those was near real-time analysis of ground forces in almost any weather. Clouds render most electro-optical satellites largely useless and radar satellites are so rare that much of the earth goes unseen by them most of the time.

Northrop Grumman has worked on an a promising approach, using L-band synthetic aperture radar and a great deal of software to come up with a radar system that could offer analysts more detailed and up-to-date information. It was displayed at the Geoint conference in San Antonio.

It can cover an enormous 6,000 square miles an hour and provide impressive detail, presented in an easily interpreted form.

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Good Morning Folks,

This is the kind of techie stuff I would love to post on but for obvious reasons I won’t. I can say though both Boeing and Lockheed also have products that are in the later stages of development and testing that are also SAR add ons for use in UAV’s that are quite similar to the NG imaging that is the subject of Colin’s story here.

ALLONS,
Byron Skinner

This is awesome. I’m picturing 24/7/365 coverage of large swaths of ground with daily updates to the change detection and polarimetric imaging. This would have an enormous impact on counterinsurgency warfare…

This will provide early warning of movement against our guys in Afgh., making surprise raids by the bad guys a lot harder to pull off.

It could also be misused against the Citizens of the U.S.

watching yu,
So could every other weapon in the military so I guess we may as well not have any of them either! Good grief!

great scott!!

A Bus sized RADAR SAT? Yea, we need to scan the Bermuda swath matrix. Maybe the enemy may have a new passport.

Shannon A. Stovell
Mainline Precision Company.

Watching yu, what a moron.

There are more cameras in a WALMART than any other “surveillence” activity

Hope you don’t go there!!!!!

This could work. We may need this for future contigency with Iran, N. Korea China, and Russia conflict.

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