High-Speed Counter-UAS interceptors -Speed Changes the Sensor Problem
Autonomous and Uncrewed Systems
Speed Changes the Sensor Problem
High-speed counter-UAS interceptors operate in a regime where relative closing speeds can approach Mach 1. At these velocities, detection, tracking, and guidance timelines compress dramatically. Traditional sensor setups designed for slower drones are no longer sufficient. The challenge is not just seeing the target—but maintaining a stable track under extreme dynamics.
Multi-Sensor Fusion as Standard
No single sensor can reliably handle high-speed engagements. Radar provides range and velocity, but struggles with small, low-RCS targets. Electro-optical and infrared systems offer precision, but are affected by weather, clutter, and latency. Effective solutions combine radar, EO/IR, and increasingly passive RF sensing into fused systems that provide continuous tracking and redundancy.
Latency and Processing Constraints
At high closing speeds, milliseconds matter. Sensor latency—capture, processing, and transmission—directly impacts interception accuracy. This is driving the integration of edge processing, AI-based tracking, and onboard decision-making. The sensor is no longer just a detector; it is part of a real-time control loop.
Tracking Under High Dynamics
Rapid manoeuvres, vibration, and platform instability create additional complexity. Sensors must maintain lock despite high angular rates and changing aspect profiles. Stabilisation, predictive tracking algorithms, and high refresh rates are essential to avoid track loss during critical engagement phases.
Dual-Use Implications
While driven by defence needs, these sensor advancements have broader applications. High-speed tracking capabilities translate into improved collision avoidance, airspace monitoring, and autonomous navigation in civilian systems. The same technologies enabling interception can enhance safety and performance across advanced unmanned platforms.
Conclusion
Counter-UAS interception at near-Mach closing speeds is redefining sensor requirements. Success depends on fusion, low latency, and predictive tracking—transforming sensors from passive observers into active components of high-speed engagement systems.
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