An artist's concept of the Long-Range Discrimination Radar system (Image courtesy of Lockheed Martin).
The primary sensor infrastructure of the GMD system was originally built for early warning purposes, according to George Lewis, a visiting scholar of Peace and Conflict Studies at Cornell University, in a blog post about the LRDR announcement. These radars have a relatively low operating frequency—about 440 MHz—limiting their bandwidth and resolution. According to Lewis, the low resolution of the radars prevents them from discriminating between warheads and relatively unsophisticated decoys. Operating in the S-band frequency range of 2 GHz to 4 GHz, however, the LRDR system will have the resolution necessary to discriminate these objects and make a more intelligent response to missile attacks.
The limitations of the current GMD system have made the LRDR a major priority for missile defense officials. “The LRDR is critically important to where I see the threat from North Korea going in the near future, with the capability of becoming more complex, requiring more interceptors,” James D. Syring, the director of the MDA, told Alaska Public Media in March.
Lockheed Martin is applying its experience with other missile defense programs to the LRDR system, according to Brad Hicks, vice president of business development Lockheed Martin, in an article from Defense News. The company has worked on the Aegis and Aegis Ashore ballistic missile defense systems and Aegis Ashore ground stations, as well as the Terminal High Altitude Air Defense (THAAD) system. More recently, Lockheed Martin has been working on the Air Force’s Space Fence program, a space surveillance system scheduled to become operational in 2019.
Raytheon Corp. and Northrop Grumman also made bids on the LRDR system. Raytheon has developed GaN-based active electronically scanned arrays (AESAs) to upgrade the Patriot Air and Missile Defense System, and cited the work with this technology in its proposal. Lockheed Martin will continue its work on the LRDR system until early 2024.