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A. Air Ministry Experimental Station; Air Route Surveillance Radar; Airport surveillance radar; Aistyonok; Alim radar system; AMES Type 6; AMES Type 7; AMES Type 80
This is an incomplete list of ground-based radars operated by the United States Marine Corps since the service first started utilizing radars in 1940. [1] The Marine Corps' has used ground-based radars for anti-aircraft artillery fire control, long range early warning, Ground-controlled interception (GCI), ground directed bombing, counter-battery radar, short-range cueing for man-portable air ...
AN/APS-111 improved AN/APS-96 ultra high frequency surveillance radar by General Electric for E-2 Hawkeye; AN/APS-112 improved AN/APS-59 AWACS radar; AN/APS-113 weather radar by Bendix Corporation for UH-1 and EC-47; AN/APS-115 maritime surveillance radar with two radar antennas by Texas Instruments for P-3 Orion
A. Air Route Surveillance Radar; ALTAIR (Radar) AN/APG-59; AN/APG-60; AN/APG-61; AN/APG-63 radar family; AN/APG-64; AN/APG-65 radar family; AN/APG-66; AN/APG-67
Perimeter surveillance radar (PSR) is a class of radar sensors that monitor activity surrounding or on critical infrastructure areas such as airports, [1] seaports, military installations, national borders, refineries and other critical industry and the like. Such radars are characterized by their ability to detect movement at ground level of ...
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.
Small Yarn - mortar-projectile tracking radar mounted in a shelter on an AT-L self-propelled, fully tracked chassis. Snoop Pair – surface search radar for submarines [1] Snoop Plate – surface search radar for submarines [1] Snoop Slab – surface search radar for submarines [1] Snoop Tray – surface search radar for submarines [1]
This was later replaced by the AN/APS-143(V)-1 Airborne Sea Surveillance Radar. It can detect a person in a life raft up to 25 miles away. The aircraft has a fixed antenna array that receives and records telemetry from test and drone vehicles flying over the Gulf of Mexico. It can relay two UHF frequencies over the horizon to ground sites. [2]