Safe And Effective
Raytheon Company
recently announced a new, affordable ground-based airport
protection system that uses high power microwave technology to
protect commercial aircraft from shoulder-fired missiles. The
airfield-based directed electromagnetic energy system, known as
Vigilant Eagle, disrupts the electronics of surface-to-air
missiles including MANPADS (Manportable Air Defense System).
"Raytheon is in the process of rolling out its Vigilant Eagle
technology that defeats the most important classes of man-portable
missiles in seconds without any alteration to or involvement by the
aircraft using the airport," said Mike Booen, vice president of
Directed Energy Weapons at Raytheon Missile Systems in Tucson,
Arizona.
"Not only has our Vigilant Eagle system been proven effective,
but it looks to be at least 10 times less costly than the current
aircraft-based countermeasure programs now in development. A
prototype system has been field tested and proven effective against
important MANPADS threats. Perhaps most importantly, it can be made
ready for trial installations in the U.S. or at Baghdad
International Airport years ahead of current development
programs."
Vigilant Eagle is installed at airports, rather than on
individual aircraft. It consists of three interconnected primary
components: a distributed Missile Warning System (MWS), a command
and control computer, and the High-power Amplifier-Transmitter
(HAT), which consists of a billboard-sized electronically steered
array of highly efficient antennas linked to solid state
amplifiers.
The MWS is a pre-positioned grid of passive infrared sensors,
mounted on cell phone towers or buildings to cover the required
detection space. Each missile detection is confirmed by at least
two sensors in an overlapping grid, yielding an extremely low false
alarm rate.
The command and control computer provides pointing commands to
the HAT and also connects to the airport security interface. The
command and control computer capability includes determination of
the launch point to notify security forces, enabling capture of the
terrorists who fired the missile.
The HAT radiates a tailored electromagnetic waveform to disrupt
the missile and deflect it away from the aircraft. Created
electromagnetic fields are well within OSHA (the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration) standards for personnel exposure
limits.