Deceptive jammer: Difference between revisions
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In [[electronic warfare]], a '''deceptive jammer''' [[electronic attack|electronically attacks]] a hostile tracking or fire control sensor, by giving it stronger signals than does the actual platform being defended. The jammer may be aboard the platform (i.e., a self-protection jammer), on an escorting platform, or in a package (i.e., [[deceptive decoy]]) either expended or towed by the platform). While most such decoys interfere with [[radar]], they also exist for [[infrared guidance]] and against [[sonar]]. | In [[electronic warfare]], a '''deceptive jammer''' [[electronic attack|electronically attacks]] a hostile tracking or fire control sensor, by giving it stronger signals than does the actual platform being defended. The jammer may be aboard the platform (i.e., a self-protection jammer), on an escorting platform, or in a package (i.e., [[deceptive decoy]]) either expended or towed by the platform). While most such decoys interfere with [[radar]], they also exist for [[infrared guidance]] and against [[sonar]]. |
Latest revision as of 13:50, 19 August 2024
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In electronic warfare, a deceptive jammer electronically attacks a hostile tracking or fire control sensor, by giving it stronger signals than does the actual platform being defended. The jammer may be aboard the platform (i.e., a self-protection jammer), on an escorting platform, or in a package (i.e., deceptive decoy) either expended or towed by the platform). While most such decoys interfere with radar, they also exist for infrared guidance and against sonar. One deceptive self-protection jammer is the AN/ALQ-122, carried by the B-52 and E-3 aircraft.[1] Reusable towed decoys include the AN/ALE-55 against radar, and the AN/SLQ-25 Nixie surface ship defense against torpedo sonars. Intelligent towed or expendable decoys, if deception fails, may convert to sacrificial decoys as a final protective measure. References
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