LUMS engineering faculty secures US patent for radar based electronic warfare technology
LUMS says this is the first ever US patent on electronic warfare from Pakistan, and was issued on June 30
LAHORE:
The Electrical Engineering faculty of the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS) have secured a US patent on their research related to Electronic Counter - Counter Measure (ECCM) radar technique, which nullifies the effect of jamming by ground-based radars and hence detects the true location of targets.
According to a statement by the university, Dr Ijaz Haider Naqvi and his PhD student Faran Awais Butt have secured the US patent. This is the first time that Pakistan has managed to get a US patent for electronic warfare.
The patent was issued on June 30, 2015.
Dr Ijaz Haider Naqvi and Faran Awais Butt. PHOTO: LUMS
The ECCM counters attempts to disturb the normal working of radar as employed under ECM technology.
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The work is based on Butt’s MS thesis “Electronic Counter-Countermeasures (ECCM) of Radars” that he completed in 2012 at LUMS under the supervision of Dr Ijaz Naqvi.
The idea is to prevent jamming of radars, utilising two radars located at a distance to prevent both velocity and range gate pull offs. In the proposed solution, bi-static radars are used in combination with the mono-static radars to mitigate the ECM effects of deception jamming.
In addition to working out solutions to counter effects of ECM, Dr Naqvi and Faran have also been working on solutions which can counter the low observability of stealth targets.
Both have had multiple joint publications relating to radar electronic warfare, which have been presented at different conferences held in China, Poland, Turkey, Ukraine and Czech Republic.
Last year, their paper was the sole paper from Pakistan that was published in the International Radar Symposium, which was held in Poland.
Read: Afghanistan signs agreement to send students to LUMS
While the application fee for the patent was sponsored by the HEC, the issuance fee was sponsored by the Syed Babar Ali School of Science and Engineering (SBASSE) at LUMS.
The Electrical Engineering faculty of the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS) have secured a US patent on their research related to Electronic Counter - Counter Measure (ECCM) radar technique, which nullifies the effect of jamming by ground-based radars and hence detects the true location of targets.
According to a statement by the university, Dr Ijaz Haider Naqvi and his PhD student Faran Awais Butt have secured the US patent. This is the first time that Pakistan has managed to get a US patent for electronic warfare.
The patent was issued on June 30, 2015.
Dr Ijaz Haider Naqvi and Faran Awais Butt. PHOTO: LUMS
The ECCM counters attempts to disturb the normal working of radar as employed under ECM technology.
Read: Pitch your idea: Participants of tech product competition upbeat about their ideas
The work is based on Butt’s MS thesis “Electronic Counter-Countermeasures (ECCM) of Radars” that he completed in 2012 at LUMS under the supervision of Dr Ijaz Naqvi.
The idea is to prevent jamming of radars, utilising two radars located at a distance to prevent both velocity and range gate pull offs. In the proposed solution, bi-static radars are used in combination with the mono-static radars to mitigate the ECM effects of deception jamming.
In addition to working out solutions to counter effects of ECM, Dr Naqvi and Faran have also been working on solutions which can counter the low observability of stealth targets.
Both have had multiple joint publications relating to radar electronic warfare, which have been presented at different conferences held in China, Poland, Turkey, Ukraine and Czech Republic.
Last year, their paper was the sole paper from Pakistan that was published in the International Radar Symposium, which was held in Poland.
Read: Afghanistan signs agreement to send students to LUMS
While the application fee for the patent was sponsored by the HEC, the issuance fee was sponsored by the Syed Babar Ali School of Science and Engineering (SBASSE) at LUMS.