ARTHUR (radar)

Artillery Hunting Radar

A Danish ARTHUR used on exercise
Type Passive electronically scanned array
Place of origin Sweden, Norway
Service history
In service 1994-present
Used by See Operators
Wars Afghanistan, Iraq
Production history
Manufacturer Hägglunds, SAAB
Unit cost SEK 27 million (1996)[1]
Variants Mod A, Mod B, Mod C
Specifications
Crew 4
Azimuth and Elevation Electrically Scanned

The radar on the ARTHUR
Type Passive phased array
Frequency C (G/H)-band
Range 60 kilometres (37 mi)
Precision 60 m (200 ft)

ARTHUR is an acronym for "Artillery Hunting Radar", is a Counter-battery radar system originally developed jointly for and in close co-operation with the Norwegian and Swedish armed forces by Ericsson Microwave Systems in both Sweden and Norway.

It is a mobile, passive electronically scanned array C-Band radar for the purpose of enemy field artillery acquisition and was developed for the primary role as the core element of a brigade or division level counter battery sensor system. The vehicle carrying the radar was originally a Bandvagn 206 developed and produced by Hägglunds, but is now more often delivered on trucks with ISO fasteners. The radar is now developed by SAAB Electronic Defence Systems (after EMW was sold to SAAB in June 2006) and Saab Technologies Norway AS.

Deployment

The ARTHUR detects hostile artillery by tracking projectiles in flight. The original ARTHUR Mod A can locate guns at 15 - 20 km and 120 mm mortars at 30 - 35 km with a circular error probable of 0.45% of range. This is accurate enough for effective counter-battery fire by friendly artillery batteries. ARTHUR can operate as a stand-alone medium-range weapons locating radar or a long-range weapon locating system, consisting of two to four radars working in coordination. This flexibility enables the system to maintain a constant surveillance of an area of interest.

The upgraded ARTHUR Mod B meets the British Army's MAMBA requirement for locating guns, mortars or rockets. It can locate guns at 20 - 25 km and 120 mm mortars at 35 - 40 km with a circular probable error of 0.35% of range. MAMBA was successfully used by the British Army in Iraq and Afghanistan.

ARTHUR Mod C has a larger antenna and can detect guns at 31 km, mortars at 55 km and rockets at 50 - 60 km depending on their size, and locate targets at a rate of 100 per minute with CEP 0.2% of range for guns and rockets and 0.1% for mortars.

It can be carried by a C-130 or slung under a heavy lift helicopter such as a Chinook. Its air mobility allows it for use by light and rapid reaction forces such as airborne and marine units.

Nordic Battle Group

The use of the ARTHUR in Nordic Battle Groups will primarily concentrate on preventing the use of artillery barrages in civilian areas, since the radar can identify an artillery unit guilty of targeting civilians. It will also be used to warn friendly mission troops of incoming indirect fire.[2]

Operational modes

ARTHUR can be operated in two main modes: Weapon locating and Fire direction. Weapon locating is used to determine the location of the guns, mortars or rocket launchers that fired and their target area. Fire direction is used to adjust the fire of own artillery onto target coordinates.

Weapon locating

When locating enemy artillery, the radar tracks the up-going trajectory of shells, calculates their points of origin and impact and, with other information, displays it to the radar operator(s). Depending on national tactics, techniques, procedures, the commander's orders and the situation, this information may be used to alert any troops in the impact area and engage the hostile batteries with counter-battery fire. If the users have digital communications networks these messages may be sent automatically.

The ARTHUR can determine whether the artillery piece is of artillery-type, rocket-type or mortar-type based upon the curve of the trajectory, the munition's speed, and its range.

Fire direction

When in Fire direction mode the radar calculates the expected impact location of the friendly fire. From this corrections are calculated and reported to hit the target coordinates.

Sweden also uses the radar for 'fall of shot' calibration.

Threats

Radars are easy to detect and locate if the enemy has the necessary ELINT/ESM capability. The consequences of this detection are likely to be attack by artillery fire or aircraft (including anti-radiation missiles) or ECM. In other circumstances ground attack with direct fire or short range indirect fire are the main threat. The usual measures against the first are using a radar horizon to screen from ground based detection, minimising transmission time, deploying radars singly and moving frequently. Swedish ARTHUR units usually operate in groups of three that guard the immediate surroundings.

Operators

Map with ARTHUR radar operators in blue

Current operators

References

  1. "ARTHUR - Artillery Hunting Radar on BV206". one35th.com. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  2. "ISTAR och artillerilokaliseringsradarn ARTHUR" (in Swedish). Swedish Armed Forces. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 17 January 2007.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "IDE and Saab team up to support the Hellenic Army's ARTHUR systems". Army Technology. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Saab Sells the ARTHUR Radar System to Italy". Defence Aerospace. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  5. "Artillery Radar System ARTHUR". Ministry of Defence & Armed Forces of the Czech Republic. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  6. "Saab receives order for weapon locating system", accessed February 28 2011
  7. "Arthur Weapon Locating System - In use" Archived July 15, 2011, at the Wayback Machine., "Saab official ARTHUR website. In use", accessed February 28th 2011

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.