Raytheon’s Advanced Technology team will develop the software required to network together multiple 360-degree LTAMDS radars to extend the protection of maneuver forces and critical assets.

RTX expanding distributed sensing capability to LTAMDS

Raytheon, an RTX (NYSE: RTX) business, has been awarded a contract from the U.S. Army to expand the company’s Advanced Distributed Radar (ADR) concept to include the Lower Tier Air & Missile Defense Sensor (LTAMDS).

Under the contract, Raytheon’s Advanced Technology team will develop the software required to network together multiple 360-degree LTAMDS radars to extend the protection of maneuver forces and critical assets.

Raytheon’s Advanced Technology team will develop the software required to network together multiple 360-degree LTAMDS radars to extend the protection of maneuver forces and critical assets.

Raytheon originally developed ADR to upgrade the U.S. Navy’s AN/SPY-6(V) family of radars to enhance performance in distributed maritime operations and drive future sensing capabilities. Now, the team is expanding the capability to address the Army’s increasingly challenging threats.

Integrating our ADR capability into LTAMDS continues the expansion of our successful software-defined aperture approach. Raytheon’s common radar software product line model generates a library of software code that can be re-used across multiple radars, significantly reducing engineering costs and development timelines for our customers.

Colin Whelan, president of Advanced Technology at Raytheon

Raytheon’s software-defined apertures deliver advanced sensors faster than ever before and increase a single array’s capability and flexibility through software upgrades. The digital transformation in radar development offers benefits in every domain – land, sea, air, space and cyberspace.

Source: RTX news release

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