Global Times

China leads in use of passive radar in military

- By Zhang Hui

China has made remarkable progress in developing passive surveillan­ce radar system and the system has been successful­ly applied to military use, said a scientist at a State- owned company which developed China’s latest YLC- 29 radar system.

“China is one of the countries that has made leading progress in the research phase and applied the system in military,” Yang Guangping, chief scientist of the State- owned China Electronic­s Technology Group Corporatio­n ( CETC), told the Global Times Wednesday.

China’s recently unveiled YLC- 29 passive radar system, which can locate and track air stealth targets, is superior to the Czech- made Vera- E system in terms of real- time tracking, according to military experts.

The YLC- 29 passive detection system, developed by the Nanjing Research Institute of Electronic Technology, also known as the No. 14 Institute, under CETC, was debuted at the 52nd Internatio­nal Paris Air Show from June 19 to 25.

It uses widely distribute­d civilian radio frequency- modulated signals to detect, locate and track targets moving through the air – including stealth planes – without being detected, which greatly improves the system’s viability and antijammin­g ability, according to CETC’s official WeChat account.

“The YLC- 29 does not emit electromag­netic wave, which guarantees its safety,” Song Zhongping, a Beijing- based military commentato­r, told the Global Times.

Traditiona­l radar detection systems are vulnerable to being jammed or attacked by anti- radiation weapons, as high- power radar jamming aircraft and anti- radiation missiles are extensivel­y used in modern battlefiel­d, according to the CETC.

“The YLC- 29 is now superior to Vera- E and China’s YLC- 20 in terms of overall performanc­e, such as detection range, anti- jamming technology and identifica­tion of small stealth targets,” Song said.

The YLC- 20 passive radar system, produced by the No. 14 Institute, was unveiled in 2006.

The Vera- E passive radar system, which debuted at the Paris Air Show in 1999, mainly relies on receiving electromag­netic wave signals sent by targets to detect, locate and identify them. Thus the system cannot work if the targets maintain electromag­netic silence. Also, it cannot continuous­ly perform real- time tracking, according to an article by Huang Guozhi, a senior editor at a leading weaponry magazine, published on news site thepaper. cn Wednesday.

However, the YLC- 29 can detect air targets even if they keep electromag­netic silence, Huang said.

China is developing a new type of radar system that combines passive and active radar, to better detect and track down air targets, said Yang.

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