Document ID: chunk:federal_register_of_legislation:F2017L00081:reg:16:p4
Version: federal_register_of_legislation:F2017L00081
Segment Type: reg
Provision Reference: reg 16 (pt 4/8)
Character Range: 90510–93758

be in compliance with United States Government NSTISSAM TEMPEST 1‑92 standards or CNSSAM TEMPEST 01‑02, to implement techniques to suppress compromising emanations of information bearing signals; or
 (v) transmit voice or data signals specially designed to elude electromagnetic detection.
 (6) [Reserved]
 (7) developmental electronic equipment or systems funded by the United States Government via contract or other funding authorisation;
 (8) unattended ground sensor (UGS) systems or equipment having all of the following:
 (i) automatic target detection;
 (ii) automatic target tracking, classification, recognition, or identification;
 (iii) self‑forming or self‑healing networks;
 (iv) self‑localisation for geo‑locating targets;
 (9) electronic sensor systems or equipment for non‑acoustic antisubmarine warfare (ASW) or mine warfare (for example, magnetic anomaly detectors (MAD), electric‑field, electromagnetic induction);
 (10) electronic sensor systems or equipment for detection of concealed weapons, having a standoff detection range of greater than 45 m for personnel or detection of vehicle‑carried weapons, not including concealed object detection equipment operating in the frequency range from 30 GHz to 3,000 GHz and having a spatial resolution of 0.5 milliradians up to and including 1 milliradians at a standoff distance of 100 m;
 (11) test sets specially designed for testing defence articles controlled in paragraphs (a)(3), (a)(4), (a)(5), or (b);
 (12) direction finding equipment for determining bearings to specific electromagnetic sources or terrain characteristics specially designed for defence articles in paragraph (a)(1) of Category IV or paragraphs (a)(5), (a)(6), or (a)(13) of Category VIII (MT if specially designed for rockets, SLVs, missiles, drones, or UAVs capable of delivering a payload of at least 500 kg to a range of at least 300 km. See note 9).
Note 1: The term Low Probability of Intercept used in this paragraph and elsewhere in this category is defined as a class of measures that disguise, delay, or prevent the interception of acoustic or electromagnetic signals. LPI techniques can involve permutations of power management, energy management, frequency variability, out‑of‑receiver‑frequency band, low‑side lobe antenna, complex waveforms, and complex scanning. LPI is also referred to as Low Probability of Intercept, Low Probability of Detection, and Low Probability of Identification.
Note 2: Subsubparagraph (1)(ii)—the term tonals implies discrete frequencies in the broadband and narrowband spectra, emanating from man‑made objects.
Note 3: Subsubparagraph (1)(iv)—adaptive compensation is the capability of an underwater modem to assess the water conditions to select the best algorithm to receive and transmit data.
Note 4: Subparagraph (3)—this subparagraph does not control:
(a) systems or equipment that require aircraft transponders in order to meet control parameters; and
(b) precision approach radar (PAR) equipment conforming to ICAO standards and employing electronically steerable linear (1‑ dimensional) arrays or mechanically positioned passive antennas; and
(c) radio altimeter equipment.
Note 5: Subsubparagraph (3)(xii)—this subsubparagraph does not control radars not