VeeraBahadur
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On 24th October 2012, a new type of Rafale took to the skies from the runway at Mont-de-Marsan (BA 118) Air Base, home of the French Air Force’s CEAM test centre. From the outside, there was virtually nothing to distinguish it from the dozens of Rafales that had already visited the base. However, hidden inside the radome was the promise of an air combat revolution: the RBE2-AESA, the first European active electronically scanned array radar to be installed on a combat aircraft.
“Altogether, we have already performed about 60 flights with the new radar,” Lieutenant-Colonel Laurent Royer, Head of the Rafale evaluation team at the CEAM, explained last summer. A total of 90 flights are planned under the experimentation programme with a view to handing over an initial batch of four aircraft to 1/7 fighter squadron “Provence” in Saint-Dizier early in 2014, along with an initial concept of operations to take best advantage of this new capacity, particularly in air-to-air combat.
The trap we must avoid is that of simply transposing our current tactics without taking account of the vast potential of this new antenna,” explains Royer. That potential has several dimensions. First, radar coverage: with range increased by 50% and an ability to scan up to 70° on either side of the aircraft axis, the volume scanned by the RBE2-AESA is much larger than that of the RBE2-PESA (see below). According to Royer, the number of tracks that can be detected simultaneously is increased almost by a factor of three.
For the pilot, this extra information could have reached saturation level, but apparently this is not the case: “We wondered whether we would need to rethink how the information is processed for the crew, but the existing interface easily aborbs the extra load.” This is also the case for the computer and its capacity to integrate the new data. “Evidently, there is no problem; the system remains fluid,” Royer declares.
The jump in the radar’s scanning capability opens up new perspectives for Rafale pilots in the air defence mission. The details of these tactical changes remain classified, but Royer gives us a few hints: “Two AESA Rafales flying at standoff distance behind a wave of fighters offer a capacity that is comparable to a mini-Awacs.” Though the exact range of the new radar is classified, it is estimated at 150 km or more against a non-stealthy fighter-type target.
In Beyond Visual Range combat, this crucial advantage can be used to make the Rafale even harder to detect. While AESA-equipped aircraft hang back, out of range of enemy aircraft weapons and sensors, other, non-AESA Rafales can approach the targets with their radar switched off, maximising the element of surprise to launch their Mica missiles using target designations transmitted by Link 16 from the AESA Rafales. An concept of operations similar to that of the US Air Force, which has already announced its intention to use its AESA-equipped F-15Cs for long-range target detection, allowing the stealthier F-22 to fire its missiles without being detected.
Clearly, the arrival of the Meteor at the end of the decade will be another game changer. The new ramjet-powered air-to-air missile will offer a maximum range similar to that of the RBE2-AESA. Further tactical changes will be required at that time.
Nowhere to hide.
The other advantage of the AESA is its ability to detect targets with much smaller radar cross sections (RCS) than the existing PESA, at the same range. “We have already peformed trials with low-RCS aircraft like the Grob 120, TBM, Epsilon and, of course, the Rafale, but the ultimate test will be the Neuron UCAV,” Royer explains. The demonstrator (more readily available than an F-22 or B-2!) will be used to accurately characterise the performance of the AESA against stealth aircraft. The CEAM will also be testing the radar’s resistance to countermeasures — a complex process since it will involve exposing the radar to French jamming systems (Spectra, etc.) whose implementation requires relative discretion. A great deal of work was required in preparation for a small number of test flights to evaluate performance in this domain.
Initially, the CEAM had a single aircraft available for the test campaign: Rafale C137, delivered in autumn 2012. This was a pre-production aircraft, without spares for maintenance of the new sensors. The evaluation team had to wait for delivery of the first production AESA aircraft (B339, a two-seater) in September 2013 to be able to validate the new air-to-air tactics with two aircraft. In the air-to-ground mode, the task of the CEAM was essentially to check for degraded performance compared with the RBE2-PESA, since no improvement was expected. That is why the AESA radar was installed on a two-seater, Rafale B305, for terrain-following tests. According to Royer, the operation takes around two hours.
“Plug and play”.
France has only ordered 60 AESA radars, but it should be possible to install them on any aircraft in the Air Force or Navy fleets. Once they have been upgraded to software standard F3.3 — which is now the case for all French Rafales — any aircraft can be fitted with an RBE2-AESA radar. Accordingly it was important to verify on a real aircraft that the radar complied with this “plug and play” requirement. The one change that is needed is a new radome to accommodate the new antenna, which comprises around 1,000 transmit/receive modules. The new antenna, which is around 20 kg heavier than that of the RBE2-PESA, simply requires the installation of an extra hinge to attach the radome to the airframe. Royer explains that, as soon as the aircraft is powered up, it recognises the new antenna and immediately reacts like an aircraft equipped with an AESA radar.
How will the AESA radar subsequently be deployed in the forces? As the specialists in the air-to-air combat domain 1/7 fighter squadron “Provence” in Saint-Dizier will be the first to bring this new capacity into service with an initial batch of four AESA Rafales. Beyond that, decisions have still to be made. In Royer’s opinion, the 60 antennas should be deployed in all squadrons to make the most of the multi-mission concept. Until then, the specialists at the CEAM will continue to refine concepts of operation in order to provide operational units with an initial turnkey capacity, which will subsequently be honed through day-to-day experience within the squadron.
French Air Force enters the AESA Era - Air&Cosmos
@sancho you may like it.
“Altogether, we have already performed about 60 flights with the new radar,” Lieutenant-Colonel Laurent Royer, Head of the Rafale evaluation team at the CEAM, explained last summer. A total of 90 flights are planned under the experimentation programme with a view to handing over an initial batch of four aircraft to 1/7 fighter squadron “Provence” in Saint-Dizier early in 2014, along with an initial concept of operations to take best advantage of this new capacity, particularly in air-to-air combat.
The trap we must avoid is that of simply transposing our current tactics without taking account of the vast potential of this new antenna,” explains Royer. That potential has several dimensions. First, radar coverage: with range increased by 50% and an ability to scan up to 70° on either side of the aircraft axis, the volume scanned by the RBE2-AESA is much larger than that of the RBE2-PESA (see below). According to Royer, the number of tracks that can be detected simultaneously is increased almost by a factor of three.
For the pilot, this extra information could have reached saturation level, but apparently this is not the case: “We wondered whether we would need to rethink how the information is processed for the crew, but the existing interface easily aborbs the extra load.” This is also the case for the computer and its capacity to integrate the new data. “Evidently, there is no problem; the system remains fluid,” Royer declares.
The jump in the radar’s scanning capability opens up new perspectives for Rafale pilots in the air defence mission. The details of these tactical changes remain classified, but Royer gives us a few hints: “Two AESA Rafales flying at standoff distance behind a wave of fighters offer a capacity that is comparable to a mini-Awacs.” Though the exact range of the new radar is classified, it is estimated at 150 km or more against a non-stealthy fighter-type target.
In Beyond Visual Range combat, this crucial advantage can be used to make the Rafale even harder to detect. While AESA-equipped aircraft hang back, out of range of enemy aircraft weapons and sensors, other, non-AESA Rafales can approach the targets with their radar switched off, maximising the element of surprise to launch their Mica missiles using target designations transmitted by Link 16 from the AESA Rafales. An concept of operations similar to that of the US Air Force, which has already announced its intention to use its AESA-equipped F-15Cs for long-range target detection, allowing the stealthier F-22 to fire its missiles without being detected.
Clearly, the arrival of the Meteor at the end of the decade will be another game changer. The new ramjet-powered air-to-air missile will offer a maximum range similar to that of the RBE2-AESA. Further tactical changes will be required at that time.
Nowhere to hide.
The other advantage of the AESA is its ability to detect targets with much smaller radar cross sections (RCS) than the existing PESA, at the same range. “We have already peformed trials with low-RCS aircraft like the Grob 120, TBM, Epsilon and, of course, the Rafale, but the ultimate test will be the Neuron UCAV,” Royer explains. The demonstrator (more readily available than an F-22 or B-2!) will be used to accurately characterise the performance of the AESA against stealth aircraft. The CEAM will also be testing the radar’s resistance to countermeasures — a complex process since it will involve exposing the radar to French jamming systems (Spectra, etc.) whose implementation requires relative discretion. A great deal of work was required in preparation for a small number of test flights to evaluate performance in this domain.
Initially, the CEAM had a single aircraft available for the test campaign: Rafale C137, delivered in autumn 2012. This was a pre-production aircraft, without spares for maintenance of the new sensors. The evaluation team had to wait for delivery of the first production AESA aircraft (B339, a two-seater) in September 2013 to be able to validate the new air-to-air tactics with two aircraft. In the air-to-ground mode, the task of the CEAM was essentially to check for degraded performance compared with the RBE2-PESA, since no improvement was expected. That is why the AESA radar was installed on a two-seater, Rafale B305, for terrain-following tests. According to Royer, the operation takes around two hours.
“Plug and play”.
France has only ordered 60 AESA radars, but it should be possible to install them on any aircraft in the Air Force or Navy fleets. Once they have been upgraded to software standard F3.3 — which is now the case for all French Rafales — any aircraft can be fitted with an RBE2-AESA radar. Accordingly it was important to verify on a real aircraft that the radar complied with this “plug and play” requirement. The one change that is needed is a new radome to accommodate the new antenna, which comprises around 1,000 transmit/receive modules. The new antenna, which is around 20 kg heavier than that of the RBE2-PESA, simply requires the installation of an extra hinge to attach the radome to the airframe. Royer explains that, as soon as the aircraft is powered up, it recognises the new antenna and immediately reacts like an aircraft equipped with an AESA radar.
How will the AESA radar subsequently be deployed in the forces? As the specialists in the air-to-air combat domain 1/7 fighter squadron “Provence” in Saint-Dizier will be the first to bring this new capacity into service with an initial batch of four AESA Rafales. Beyond that, decisions have still to be made. In Royer’s opinion, the 60 antennas should be deployed in all squadrons to make the most of the multi-mission concept. Until then, the specialists at the CEAM will continue to refine concepts of operation in order to provide operational units with an initial turnkey capacity, which will subsequently be honed through day-to-day experience within the squadron.
French Air Force enters the AESA Era - Air&Cosmos
@sancho you may like it.