Implementation and testing of a retrodirective cross-eye jammer

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Authors

Pieterse, Frans-Paul

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Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers

Abstract

One of the few electronic attack techniques that can deceive radars in angle is cross-eye jamming, which mimics the naturally-occurring phenomenon glint. The extreme tolerance requirements of cross-eye jamming mean that a retrodirective implementation is required, but published measurements of cross-eye jamming either ignore the retrodirective implementation or only simulate it. The implementation of a retrodirective cross-eye jammer and its testing against a monopulse radar are described. A procedure for calibrating the jammer is outlined and is shown to be effective by achieving large angular errors. The measured results agree well with the extended analysis of cross-eye jamming and confirm that the implemented jammer is retrodirective. Specifically, the ability of a cross-eye jammer to generate an indicated angle that never becomes zero, thereby potentially breaking a tracking lock, is confirmed.

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Keywords

Angular deception, Radar countermeasures, Monopulse, Cross-eye jamming, Electronic attack, Electronic warfare, Antenna measurements, Phase measurement, Sea measurements, Radar measurements, Radar antennas, Jamming

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Citation

Pieterse, F.P. & Du Plessis, W.P. 2022, 'Implementation and testing of a retrodirective cross-eye jammer', IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems, vol. 58, no. 5, pp. 4486 - 44494, doi : 10.1109/TAES.2022.3164017.