Australia A more recent addition is the
Jindalee Operational Radar Network developed by the Australian
Department of Defence in 1998 and completed in 2000. It is operated by
No. 1 Radar Surveillance Unit of the
Royal Australian Air Force. Jindalee is a
multistatic radar (multiple-receiver) system using OTH-B, allowing it to have both long range as well as anti-
stealth capabilities. It has an official range of , but in 1997 the prototype was able to detect missile launches by
China over distant. Jindalee uses 560
kW compared to the United States' OTH-B's 1 MW, yet offers far better range than the U.S. 1980s system, due to the considerably improved electronics and signal processing.
Brazil The OTH 0100 Radar is capable of monitoring vessels beyond away from shore, exceeding the direct line of sight of conventional radars.
Canada Canada has been investigating the use of high frequency surface wave radar (HFSWR) for surveillance of the 200 nautical mile
exclusive economic zone (EEZ) for more than 30 years. Research was initiated in 1984 with the re-purposing of a decommissioned
LORAN-A navigation beacon for undertaking experimentation in aircraft, vessel and iceberg tracking. Research continued for the next decade and in 1999, Canada’s installed two SWR503 HFSWR systems at Cape Race and Cape Bonavista, Newfoundland. The sites underwent a technology evaluation in 2000 and were subsequently upgraded and operationally evaluated in 2002. The following is a quote from the October 2002 Operational Evaluation (OPEVAL) performed by Canadian Department of National Defence: "HFSWR is a beneficial addition to the Recognized Maritime Picture (RMP). Of all the data sources evaluated, it was the only sensor offering near real-time information updates. It provided frequent reporting and generally demonstrated reliable tracking of surface targets in its area of coverage. When the HFSWR system was combined with other data sources, there was a synergistic effect that improved the overall quality of the RMP. Furthermore, from the analysis of the potential contribution to the surveillance-related Force Planning Scenarios, it was evident that the RMP would benefit from the addition of the HFSWR as a new data source." International sales of the SWR503 radar followed with operational systems installed in Asia (2008) and Europe (2009). In 2007 operation of the Canadian systems was halted due to concerns over the potential for harmful interference with primary spectrum users. In 2010 the unique capability of HFSWR to provide low cost surveillance of the EEZ resulted in a re-evaluation of the technology and subsequent development of a 3rd generation, (3rd gen) HFSWR system based on the principle of sense-and-adapt technology that enabled operation on a non-allocated, non-interference basis through the use of dynamic spectrum management. Additional developments included improved range performance, better positional accuracy and reduction of false tracks and earlier track initiation. In June 2019, MAEROSPACE was granted a global license to design, manufacture, and internationally market the Canadian HFSWR system and its derivatives. On 18 March 2025, Canadian prime minister
Mark Carney announced that Canada would purchase JORN radar technology from Australia, for deployment over the Arctic.
China A number of OTH-B and OTH-SW radars are reportedly in operation in China. However, transmission from these radars causes much
interference to other international licensed users,. An OTH-B set was added in Inner Mongolia following the deployment of THAAD to South Korea. (NOSTRADAMUS stands for New Transhorizon Decametric System Applying Studio Methods (French:
nouveau système transhorizon décamétrique appliquant les méthodes utilisées en studio).) In March 1999, the OTH radar NOSTRADAMUS was said to have detected two Northrop B-2 Spirits flying to Kosovo. It entered service for the French army in 2005 and is still in development. It is based on a star-shaped antenna field, used for emission and reception (monostatic), and can detect aircraft at a range of more than , in a 360-degree arc. The frequency range used is from 6 to 30 MHz. Launched officially in 2009, the French STRADIVARIUS research project developed a new over-the-horizon radar (High Frequency Surface Wave Radar – HFSWR) capable of monitoring maritime traffic up to offshore. A demonstration site is operational since January 2015 on the French Mediterranean coast to showcase the 24/7 capabilities of the system that is now offered for sale by DIGINEXT. [The preceding link seems to be broken]
India India has developed a variety of long and short range radars. Although it doesn't have an operational over the horizon radar at present, India's
Swordfish Long Range Tracking Radar, a part of
India's missile defence system has a maximum range of currently being upgraded for .
DRDO's
LRDE is working on a prototype OTH radar. The design work of system is already complete and a prototype OTH is expected to realised by late 2021. The prototype will have two different types of arrays and itself will determine best frequency to use to track objects. After successful trials of existing system, India is expected to develop a large OTH radar based on same design.
Iran Iran is working on an OTH radar called
Sepehr, with a reported range of . It is currently operational.
Soviet Union / Ukraine / Russia array, near
Chernobyl Beginning as early as the 1950s, the Soviet Union had also studied OTH systems. The first experimental model appears to be the
Veyer (Hand Fan), which was built in 1949. The next serious Soviet project was
Duga, built outside
Mykolaiv on the
Black Sea coast near
Odessa in Ukraine. Aimed eastward, Duga first ran on 7 November 1971, and was successfully used to track missile launches from the far east and Pacific Ocean to the testing ground on
Novaya Zemlya. This was followed by the first operational system
Duga-1, known in the west as
Steel Yard, which first broadcast in 1976. Built outside Gomel, near
Chernobyl, it was aimed northward and covered the continental United States. Its loud and repetitive pulses in the middle of the shortwave radio bands led to its being known as the "Russian Woodpecker" by
amateur radio (ham) operators. The Soviet Union eventually shifted the frequencies they used, without admitting they were even the source, largely due to its interference with certain long-range air-to-ground communications used by commercial airliners. A second system was set up near
Komsomolsk-on-Amur in the Russian Far East, also covering the continental United States and Alaska. In early 2014, Russia announced a new system, called
Container, that was to see over 3000 km.
Podsolnukh (Sunflower) - Coast-horizon shortwave station short-range radar. Designed to detect surface and air targets at a distance of . Designed for use in coastal surface and air control systems within the economic zone. "Sunflower" allows operators to automatically and simultaneously detect, track and classify up to 300 offshore and 100 air objects beyond the radio horizon, and provide their coordinates to the targeting systems and armaments of ships and air defense systems. The radar passed state tests in 2008. Three stations are on duty, in the
Sea of Okhotsk, the
Sea of Japan, and the
Caspian Sea.
USA and UK UK/US Cobra Mist The first truly operational development was an Anglo-American system known as
Cobra Mist, which began construction in the late 1960s. Cobra Mist used an enormous 10 MW transmitter and could detect aircraft over the western Soviet Union from its location in
Suffolk. When system testing started in 1972, however, an unexpected source of noise rendered it largely unusable. The source of the noise was never identified and the site was abandoned in 1973. Other early UK/US systems from the same era include: • an installation at
RAF Akrotiri on
Cyprus and
Okinawa. Cobra Shoe was a reported Over The Horizon (Backscatter) (OTH-B) radar designed by
RCA Corporation, designed to monitor ballistic missile tests in the interior of the Soviet Union, installed in the
Western Sovereign Base Area (Akrotiri),
Cyprus. Source is "U.S. declassified documents". Installed since around 1964; no details on when/whether it left service. • the
Sugar Tree radar system.
U.S. Air Force The
United States Air Force Rome Laboratory had the first complete success with their
AN/FPS-118 OTH-B. A prototype with a 1 MW transmitter and a separate receiver was installed in
Maine, offering coverage over a 60-degree arc between . A permanent transmitting facility was then built at
Moscow AFS, a receiving facility at
Columbia Falls Air Force Station, and an operational center between them in
Bangor, Maine. The coverage could be extended with additional receivers, providing for complete coverage over a 180-degree arc (each 60 degree portion known as a "sector").
GE Aerospace was awarded the development contract, expanding the existing east coast system with two additional sectors, while building another three-sector system on the west coast, a two-sector system in
Alaska, and a one-sector system facing south. In 1992, the Air Force contracted to extend the coverage 15 degrees clockwise on the southern of the three east coast sectors to be able to cover the southeast U.S. border. Additionally, the range was extended to , crossing the equator. This was operated 40 hours a week at random times. Radar data were fed to the U.S. Customs/Coast Guard C3I Center, Miami;
Joint Task Force 4 Operations Center, Key West;
U.S. Southern Command Operations Center, Key West; and U.S. Southern Command Operations Center, Panama. The CRS would consist of four sectors, each covering a 60-degree arc, for a total coverage arc of 240 degrees over the western, southwestern, southeastern, and eastern approaches to North America, including the Gulf of Mexico, the land area of Mexico, and the Pacific Ocean west and south of Mexico. The CRS would also cover near-shore areas along both the eastern and western coasts of North America that are not covered by the ECRS and WCRS because the OTH-B system functions only at a distance greater than 500 nmi from the receive antennas. Thus, CRS would complete coverage of those areas, overlapping the surveillance areas of the ECRS and WCRS. With the end of the Cold War, the influence of the two senators from Maine was not enough to save the operation and the Alaska and southern-facing sites were canceled, the two so-far completed western sectors and the eastern ones were turned off and placed in "warm storage," allowing them to be used again if needed. By 2002, the west coast facilities were downgraded to "cold storage" status, meaning that only minimal maintenance was performed by a caretaker. Research was begun into the feasibility of removing the facilities. After a period of public input and environmental studies, in July 2005 the U.S. Air Force Air Combat Command published a "Final Environmental Assessment for Equipment Removal at Over-the-Horizon Backscatter Radar - West Coast Facilities". A final decision was made to remove all radar equipment at the west coast sector's transmitter site at
Christmas Valley Air Force Station outside
Christmas Valley, Oregon and its receiver site near
Tulelake, California. This work was completed by July 2007 with the demolition and removal of the antenna arrays, leaving the buildings, fences and utility infrastructure at each site intact. In 2018, development started on the high-frequency Tactical Multi-Mission Over the Horizon Radar (TACMOR), a technology prototype to expand air and maritime awareness over the
Western Pacific. In 2022 construction of a TACMOR radar station in
Palau was agreed, expected to be operational in 2026.
U.S. Navy The
United States Navy created their own system, the
AN/TPS-71 ROTHR (
Relocatable Over-the-Horizon Radar), which covers a 64-degree wedge-shaped area at ranges from 500 to 1,600
nautical miles (925 to 3,000 km). ROTHR was originally intended to monitor ship and aircraft movement over the Pacific, and thus allow coordinated fleet movements well in advance of an engagement. In 1991, a prototype ROTHR system was installed on the isolated Aleutian Island of
Amchitka, Alaska, monitoring the eastern coast of Russia. It remained in use until 1993, and the equipment was later removed into storage. The first production systems were installed in the test site in Virginia for acceptance testing, but were then transitioned to counter the
illegal drug trade, covering
Central America and the
Caribbean. The second production ROTHR was later set up in Texas, covering many of the same areas in the Caribbean, but also providing coverage over the Pacific as far south as
Colombia. It also operates in the anti-drug trafficking role. The third, and final, production system was installed in Puerto Rico, extending anti-drug surveillance past the equator, deep into South America. ==Alternative approaches to over the horizon radar==