China Debuts 6G-Powered Warfare System
This advanced platform employs a state-of-the-art signal processing framework, functioning dually as a high-speed communication device and a ground-based jammer. Leveraging ultra-fast optical fiber links, it can simultaneously share large volumes of combat data with over 300 allied systems.
The Northrop Grumman AN/APG-85 radar, used on F-35 stealth aircraft, operates in the X-band spectrum — reaching frequencies up to 12 gigahertz. This makes many conventional electronic warfare countermeasures ineffective. However, China’s new system, powered by a photon-based core, can disrupt even these high-frequency radars by creating thousands of deceptive targets at or above the 12-gigahertz range, according to researchers involved in the project.
This innovation is reportedly the first publicly acknowledged system globally with the ability to execute “simultaneous same-frequency full-duplex communication and jamming capabilities,” as noted by the publication.
China currently leads the world in 6G-related intellectual property, holding the majority of patents in the field.
Expected to eclipse its predecessor, 6G promises blistering speeds of over one terabit per second and ultra-low latency, dropping to just 100 microseconds.
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