I have been reading the Tom Clancy’s Without Remorse. In it a US Cruiser begins jamming of a radar installations of a NVA radar station. The operators inside still manage to acertain from amongst the clutter the ships and A/C.
I understand the basic theory by which jamming works, but surely its should make it impossible for the operators to get a reading.
It all depends on how powerful the jamming transmitters are, how powerful the actual signal is, and how good your processing is to coax out signals out of the noise.
Yes.
To learn more about what’s current, you could sign up for the Association of Old Crows’ 6th Multinational Passive Covert Radar Conference in Rome NY, this fall. Ask around, and if people think you have the clearance for it they’ll tell you all sorts of amusing stories about getting around jamming, and screwing up other people’s radar.
EW’s a big field, it’s been played for a long time. This tome looks like it may give a decent overview of what was current 15 years ago: Introduction to ultra-wideband radar systems