Knowledge (XXG)

Advanced Tactical Airborne Reconnaissance System

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37: 121:(SAR) imagery; and a digital data link mounted in a centerline pod. ATARS fits in the nose in place of the nose gun, with a small datalink pod mounted on the centerline station. The digital data link will transmit imagery and auxiliary data to any Common Imaging Ground/Surface Station (CIG/SS) compatible system including the Joint Services Imagery Processing System (JSIPS) or Marine Tactical Exploitation Group (TEG) based ashore and Navy JSIPS (JSIPS-N) aboard ship. 20: 112:
aircraft. It consists of the Advanced Tactical Airborne Reconnaissance System (ATARS) with infrared and visible light sensors, two digital tape recorders, and a Reconnaissance Management System (RMS); an interface with the
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Each of the four U.S. Marine Corps F/A-18D squadrons have three ATARS aircraft, giving a total of 12 ATARS equipped aircraft altogether. The first operational use of ATARS equipped aircraft occurred in February 2000 when
201: 66: 191: 196: 88: 176: 49: 59: 53: 45: 105: 159: 70: 118: 143: 19: 147: 109: 185: 131: 135: 104:(ATARS) is a system for image acquisition, data storage, and data link used by the 24: 164: 139: 114: 146:. ATARS is a considerable advance in capability on the Marines old 18: 30: 177:
After Action report on ATARS after ‘’Allied Force’’
27:with the ATARS system in the nose of the aircraft 102:Advanced Tactical Airborne Reconnaissance System 58:but its sources remain unclear because it lacks 16:Reconnaissance system used in US Marine aircraft 8: 202:Military equipment introduced in the 1990s 89:Learn how and when to remove this message 117:Radar Upgrade (Phase II) which records 7: 192:United States Marine Corps equipment 14: 35: 1: 218: 106:United States Marine Corps 197:Synthetic aperture radar 119:synthetic aperture radar 44:This article includes a 73:more precise citations. 144:Operation Allied Force 28: 22: 160:www.spyflight.co.uk 46:list of references 29: 99: 98: 91: 209: 94: 87: 83: 80: 74: 69:this article by 60:inline citations 39: 38: 31: 23:An F/A-18D from 217: 216: 212: 211: 210: 208: 207: 206: 182: 181: 173: 156: 127: 125:Operational use 95: 84: 78: 75: 64: 50:related reading 40: 36: 17: 12: 11: 5: 215: 213: 205: 204: 199: 194: 184: 183: 180: 179: 172: 171:External links 169: 168: 167: 162: 155: 152: 126: 123: 110:F/A-18D Hornet 97: 96: 54:external links 43: 41: 34: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 214: 203: 200: 198: 195: 193: 190: 189: 187: 178: 175: 174: 170: 166: 163: 161: 158: 157: 153: 151: 149: 145: 141: 137: 133: 132:MCAS Beaufort 124: 122: 120: 116: 111: 107: 103: 93: 90: 82: 72: 68: 62: 61: 55: 51: 47: 42: 33: 32: 26: 21: 138:deployed to 136:VMFA(AW)-332 128: 101: 100: 85: 79:January 2024 76: 65:Please help 57: 25:VMFA(AW)-332 165:www.fas.org 71:introducing 186:Categories 154:References 150:aircraft. 148:RF-4B/C 140:Hungary 108:on its 67:improve 134:based 115:APG-73 52:, or 142:in 188:: 56:, 48:, 92:) 86:( 81:) 77:( 63:.

Index


VMFA(AW)-332
list of references
related reading
external links
inline citations
improve
introducing
Learn how and when to remove this message
United States Marine Corps
F/A-18D Hornet
APG-73
synthetic aperture radar
MCAS Beaufort
VMFA(AW)-332
Hungary
Operation Allied Force
RF-4B/C
www.spyflight.co.uk
www.fas.org
After Action report on ATARS after ‘’Allied Force’’
Categories
United States Marine Corps equipment
Synthetic aperture radar
Military equipment introduced in the 1990s

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