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Raytheon Receives $369 Million For Phase II Of MP-RTIP Radar

During Phase II, Raytheon and Northrop Grumman will produce six MP-RTIP radar systems: three for the E-10A (2 full systems and 1 partial system) and three for Global Hawk.

El Segundo CA (SPX) Jun 14, 2004
Raytheon Company has received a $369 million System Development and Demonstration (SDD) contract for Phase II of the U.S. Air Force's Multi-Platform Radar Technology Insertion Program (MP-RTIP).

"This award marks the next step in the development of large airborne surveillance and reconnaissance radars," said Dr. Richard Anderson, vice president of Integrated Airborne Systems at Raytheon Space and Airborne Systems.

"MP-RTIP will enable tomorrow's commanders and decision makers to detect, track and identify both airborne and surface targets faster and more clearly than ever. Raytheon is proud to be part of such an endeavor."

Since December 2000, Raytheon and Northrop Grumman have been teamed for the design, development and production of the Air Force's next-generation of air-to-ground and air-to-air surveillance radar.

During Phase II, Raytheon and Northrop Grumman will produce six MP-RTIP radar systems: three for the E-10A (2 full systems and 1 partial system) and three for Global Hawk. In addition to contributing to the E-10A delivery effort, Raytheon will jointly design and manufacture the Global Hawk MP-RTIP hardware and expects flight-testing to begin during 2006.

Raytheon's Phase II contract is a part of an $888 million award given to Northrop Grumman by the Air Force on April 30.

MP-RTIP is a modular, active electronically scanned array radar system that can be scaled in size for integration on manned and unmanned airborne platforms. The Air Force plans to deploy the radar on its RQ-4B Global Hawk unmanned aerial reconnaissance system and the E-10A/Multi-Sensor Command and Control Aircraft (MC2A).

The radar offers commanders several new ways to collect and exploit critical battlefield information. Unlike currently fielded airborne ground surveillance systems, for example, the radar will be able to collect ground moving target indicator imagery and synthetic aperture radar still images simultaneously.

The radar will also be able to detect, track and identify more targets faster and with higher resolution than ever. Finally, it will feature a radar mode known as an air moving target indicator, which will allow it to track low-flying cruise missiles.

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