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Airborne early warning and control

An airborne early warning and control (AEW&C) system is an airborne radar early warning system designed to detect aircraft, ships, vehicles, missiles and other incoming projectiles at long ranges, as well as performing command and control of the battlespace in aerial engagements by informing and directing friendly fighter and attack aircraft. AEW&C units are also used to carry out aerial surveillance over ground and maritime targets, and frequently perform battle management command and control (BMC2). When used at altitude, the radar system on AEW&C aircraft allows the operators to detect, track and prioritize targets and identify friendly aircraft from hostile ones in real-time and from much farther away than ground-based radars.[1] Like ground-based radars, AEW&C systems can be detected and targeted by opposing forces, but due to aircraft mobility and extended sensor range, they are much less vulnerable to counter-attacks than ground systems.[2]

AEW&C aircraft are used for both defensive and offensive air operations, and serve air forces in the same role as what the combat information center is to naval warships, in addition to being a highly mobile and powerful radar platform. So useful and advantageous is it to have such aircraft operating at a high altitude, that some navies also operate AEW&C aircraft for their warships at sea, either coastal- or carrier-based and on both fixed-wing and rotary-wing platforms. In the case of the United States Navy, the Northrop Grumman E-2 Hawkeye AEW&C aircraft is assigned to its supercarriers to protect them and augment their onboard command information centers (CICs). The designation "airborne early warning" (AEW) was used for earlier similar aircraft used in the less-demanding radar picket role,[3] such as the Fairey Gannet AEW.3 and Lockheed EC-121 Warning Star, and continues to be used by the RAF for its Sentry AEW1, while AEW&C (airborne early warning and control) emphasizes the command and control capabilities that may not be present on smaller or simpler radar picket aircraft. AWACS (Airborne Warning and Control System) is the name of the specific system installed in the E-3 and Japanese Boeing E-767 AEW&C airframes, but is often used as a general synonym for AEW&C.[4][5]

List of airborne early warning aircraft

List of AEW&C aircraft operators

(e.g. JSTARS)

Airborne ground surveillance

Armistead, Leigh and Edwin Armistead. Awacs and Hawkeyes: The Complete History of Airborne Early Warning Aircraft. St Paul, Minnesota: Zenith Imprint, 2002.  0-7603-1140-4.

ISBN

Davies, Ed. "AWACS Origins: Brassboard – Quest for the E-3 Radar". . No. 119, September/October 2005. Stamford, Lincs, UK: Key Publishing. pp. 2–6. ISSN 0143-5450.

Air Enthusiast

Gibson, Chris (2011). The Admiralty and AEW: Royal Navy Airborne Early Warning Projects. Blue Envoy Press.  978-0956195128.

ISBN

Gordon, Yefim; Komissarov, Dmitriy (2010). Soviet/Russian AWACS Aircraft: Tu-126, A-50, An-71, Ka-31. Red Star Vol. 23. Hinckley, England: Midland Publishing.  978-1857802153.

ISBN

Gordon, Yefim; Davison, Peter (2006). Tupolev Tu-95 Bear. Warbird Tech. Vol. 43. North Branch, Minnesota: Specialty Press.  978-1-58007-102-4.

ISBN

Hazell, Steve (2000). Fairey Gannet. Warpaint Series No.23. Buckinghamshire, England: Hall Park Books.  1363-0369.

ISSN

Hirst, Mike (1983). Airborne Early Warning: Design, Development, and Operations. London: Osprey.  978-0-85045-532-8.

ISBN

Hurturk, Kivanc N. (1998). History of the Boeing 707. New Hills: Buchair.  0-9666368-0-5.

ISBN

Lake, Jon (February 2009). "Aircraft of the RAF – Part 10 Sentry AEW.1". . Vol. 76, no. 2. Stamford, UK: Key Publishing. pp. 44–47.

Air International

Lloyd, Alwyn T. (1987). Boeing 707 & AWACS. in Detail and Scale. Falbrook, CA: Aero Publishers.  0-8306-8533-2.

ISBN

Neufeld, Jacob; Watson, George M. Jr.; Chenoweth, David (1997). Technology and the Air Force. A Retrospective Assessment. Washington, D.C.: United States Air Force. pp. 267–287. Archived 7 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine

http://www.dtic.mil/cgi-bin/GetTRDoc?AD=ADA440094&Location=U2&doc=GetTRDoc.pdf

Pither, Tony (1998). The Boeing 707 720 and C-135. Air-Britain (Historians).  0-85130-236-X.

ISBN

Tyack, Bill "Maritime Patrol in the Piston Engine Era" Royal Air Force Historical Society Journal 33, 2005  1361-4231.

ISSN

Wilson, Stewart (1998). Boeing 707, Douglas DC-8, and Vickers VC-10. Fyshwick, Australia: Aerospace Publications.  1-875671-36-6.

ISBN

AWACS and JSTARS

NATO AWACS-Spotter Geilenkirchen website

FAS.org E-3 Sentry information

Boeing AWACS website

Airborne Early Warning Association website

- in Russian

TU-126 MOSS AWACS – history of development

– in Russian

Airborne radar "Gneis-2"

. strategypage.com.

"Electronic Weapons: AWACS Then And Forever"