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    AFRL’s cutting edge ISR platform commences Harvest Reaper flight testing

    AFRL’s cutting edge ISR platform commences Harvest Reaper flight testing

    Courtesy Photo | WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Ohio – The Air Force Research Laboratory’s ...... read more read more

    DAYTON, OHIO, UNITED STATES

    06.15.2017

    Story by Marisa Alia-Novobilski 

    Air Force Research Laboratory

    WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Ohio – A year of cutting-edge technology development and prototyping by Air Force Research Laboratory teams has culminated in a series of flight demonstrations as part of the Sensors Directorate Blue Guardian “Project Harvest Reaper.”

    AFRL’s AgilePod has embarked on a series of flight tests aboard a Douglas DC-3 aircraft in preparation for integration on the Air Force MQ-9 Reaper unmanned aerial vehicle later this year. The Lego-like pod is flying in multiple configurations with a mixture of sensor systems and technologies on board, with the goal to optimize the pod for operational activity and longevity.

    “AgilePod is a game-changer,” said Capt. Russell Shirey, Blue Guardian Program Manager at the AFRL Sensors Directorate. “This is a unique opportunity to highlight the benefits of modular open system architectures for airborne platforms.”

    AgilePod, the first fully government-owned, multi-intelligence, reconfigurable pod, was developed using agile manufacturing technology and a modular open mission system approach to software design, resulting in a system capable of supporting rapid integration and mission agility to address emerging threats in new environments.

    The Blue Guardian team, in collaboration with the Manufacturing Technology Division of the Materials and Manufacturing Directorate and the Air Force Sensors Program Office, integrated Blue Guardian Open Adaptable Architecture into the AgilePod, culminating in a cross-directorate technology push to the warfighter. Open Adaptable Architecture is constructed on the Air Force’s Open Mission System (OMS) common set of software standards, and takes advantage of Sensor Open System Architectures, which are industry electrical and mechanical standards, to enable mission system interoperability.

    “Common connections and standards allows a greater suite of sensors to be rapidly integrated on the pod, enabling new capabilities. Having standards helps ensure an operator can successfully command a sensor to turn on or off, left or right, similar to turning a key in the ignition in a car, without having the change the other aspects of the system,” said Luke Borntrager, Blue Guardian Lead Engineer.

    Unique to the AgilePod is that it is flight line reconfigurable, enabling operators to meet a variety of mission demands with multiple sensors on a single platform. A mixture of different pod configurations, ranging from 28 to 60 inches in length, are being tested on the DC-3, enabling simultaneous testing of multiple sensors including high-definition video, radar, infrared sensors and more.

    “Current sensor capabilities on aircraft are built for specific mission tasks, such as close air support or targeting, using proprietary software and hardware. Open system architecture standards combined with a single AgilePod having ‘plug-and-play’ capabilities and configurations enables one pod to perform hundreds of different mission sets. This is key for cost savings and increased sustainability,” said Shirey.

    A standard data link and command and control system enables multiple sensor data analysis and command and control, enhancing warfighter capability and situational awareness. Additionally, a simulated MQ-9 Ground Control Station inside of the DC-3 enables operators to test data links and fine tune them prior to operational deployment on the Reaper.

    “The ability to rapidly test multiple configurations on the DC-3 aircraft gives us a ‘Lab-In-The-Sky’ concept and allows our team to wring out any issues before we move forward to the unmanned MQ-9, where we will not have the luxury of engineers in the cockpit,” said Shirey.

    Though the pod is currently in flight demonstration and testing, engineers are already looking towards future capabilities when it transitions to the MQ-9 platform. Once transitioned, it will support operations by the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, Air Combat Command, Air Force Special Operations Command and others.

    The fact that the AgilePod is a government-owned system—meaning that the government fully owns the digital data underlying the manufacturing of the platform—also plays into OMS design as it will enable industry to invest money into improving Air Force capabilities by creating new sensors, with the knowledge that they will be compatible with current and future platforms.

    “This bends the cost curve for sensor capabilities, processing and integration,” said Shirey. “It also opens up greater opportunities to partner with industry developers to enable the best capabilities for Air Force operational platforms.”

    Government-owned data rights also allow for requirements and technology transitions to be competed across vendors. In other words, if a new sensor capability is required, a wider range of vendors will have the data required to compete for the contract.

    “Industry will play a major role in the future success of AgilePod,” said Shirey. “Response has been great, as they like the idea that they have the opportunity to put their sensors on the MQ-9 and other platforms through the AgilePod in the future.”

    “In a memo earlier this year, the Secretary of Defense challenged the acquisition community to rapidly innovate and leverage industry advancements to defeat the adversary. AgilePod allows us to team with industry to develop the best solutions,” said Mark DiPadua, the AgilePod team lead in AFRL’s Manufacturing and Industrial Technologies Division, Materials and Manufacturing Directorate.

    “Our goal is to ensure intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities can be more affordable and operationally flexible for the warfighter,” said Shirey. “That’s what these demonstration flights will help us achieve as we head towards the future of ISR.”
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    The AFRL Blue Guardian program aims to research, develop and demonstrate advanced sensor and rapid integration technologies using open system architectures to bridge the gap between the laboratory and the warfighter. For the Harvest Reaper project, Blue Guardian is working with the AFRL Materials and Manufacturing Directorate’s AgilePod team to demonstrate the cost saving benefits of an open architecture, reconfigurable C4ISR pod system.

    The AgilePod will be on display at the Agile ISR Open House, to be held on July 13, 2017 at Hangar 268, Wright-Paterson Air Force Base, to enable vendors to learn more about the AgilePod and future opportunities. For additional information, contact 937-713-4308.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 06.15.2017
    Date Posted: 06.15.2017 14:31
    Story ID: 238068
    Location: DAYTON, OHIO, US

    Web Views: 846
    Downloads: 1

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