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India has recently secured a highly crucial advancement in military electronics by successfully creating a completely domestic manufacturing base for Gallium Nitride (GaN) Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radars.
This rare milestone places the country in an exclusive group of technologically advanced nations.
This development signifies a massive leap rather than a routine hardware update.
It highlights India's shift from relying on foreign semiconductor technology to achieving complete independence in designing and producing next-generation military radars, electronic warfare systems, and high-frequency chips.
The drive to master this technology was born out of geopolitical necessity.
During the 2016 Rafale fighter jet negotiations, France reportedly refused to share the critical technology behind the GaN chips used in its sophisticated radars, citing strict export controls like the Wassenaar Arrangement.
This denial blocked India from acquiring the highest tier of radar technology at the time.
Instead of settling for continuous foreign reliance, India launched an aggressive indigenous development campaign.
Spearheaded by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) through its Solid State Physics Laboratory (SSPL) and the Gallium Arsenide Enabling Technology Centre (GAETEC), the project focused entirely on mastering complex GaN architectures.
This dedicated effort led to a fully operational domestic production line. GAETEC has successfully designed over thirty types of high-frequency chips, achieving the manufacturing quality required for cutting-edge military applications.
This monumental achievement shields India’s critical defence projects from international supply chain shocks and technology blockades.
Technologically, Gallium Nitride is a massive upgrade over older Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) systems.
Open-source data indicates that GaN semiconductors provide up to five times the power density of GaAs and can operate safely at much higher temperatures.
They generate significantly more power while producing less heat, leading to extended detection ranges, superior electronic warfare capabilities, sharper target imaging, and better survival rates in heavily jammed combat zones.
Recognizing these benefits, India has chosen to leapfrog older technologies and integrate GaN directly into its upcoming radar networks.
A prime example is the Virupaksha AESA radar, designed by DRDO’s Electronics and Radar Development Establishment (LRDE) for the Rs 63,000 crore Super Sukhoi upgrade program.
The Virupaksha system will feature around 2,400 GaN-based transmit and receive modules and recently achieved its "First Light" power-on milestone in February 2026.
This new radar will boast tracking ranges of over 400 kilometers for conventional targets and can reportedly spot low-signature stealth aircraft from up to 200 kilometers away.
It completely outclasses the older Russian-made PESA radars currently flying on India's Su-30MKI jets, all while weighing significantly less.
This leap places India well ahead of Russia in modern fighter radar capabilities.
While Russian defence industries currently struggle with international sanctions and a reliance on older semiconductor technology, India is rapidly deploying cutting-edge GaN systems equipped with modern anti-jamming features.
The push for GaN technology extends well beyond the Su-30MKI.
Future fighter programs, including the Tejas Mk2 and the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA), will rely on the GaN-based Uttam Mk2 AESA radar.
This ensures that India’s future frontline combat aircraft will be built around a sovereign sensor ecosystem.
Furthermore, this semiconductor revolution is transforming India's electronic warfare (EW) capabilities.
The upcoming Talon Shield airborne jammer pod, developed by private firm Data Patterns, utilizes GaN-powered arrays combined with Digital Radio Frequency Memory (DRFM).
Expected to begin flight trials by early 2026, the system does not just jam enemy radars with noise; it actively captures, alters, and beams back fake radar signatures to confuse hostile air defence systems.
On the global stage, India now holds a distinguished position.
While the United States and China dominate mass production due to their massive industrial bases, India has firmly joined the elite ranks of sovereign designers like France, Israel, and Japan, who control their own intellectual property and semiconductor physics.
Moving forward, the primary hurdle is no longer inventing the technology, but manufacturing it at scale.
Both China and the US heavily subsidize their semiconductor industries to churn out GaN wafers in massive quantities.
China also holds significant control over the raw materials required for production.
For India to fully secure its strategic advantage, it must now focus on expanding its domestic industrial capacity from laboratory-level production to massive, commercial-scale manufacturing.