Page 45 - GCN, Oct/Nov 2017
P. 45

D UNMANNED SYSTEMS
Under the Service Academies Swarm Challenge (SASC) sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, teams from the Army, Navy and Air Force are testing software that will eventually enable drones to autonomously coordinate attacks and respond to challenges by opposing swarms of enemy aircraft.
“The whole premise of the pro- gram is to develop these offensive and defensive tactics and see if they could be implemented into a swarm of unmanned systems,” said Bradley Knaus, a physicist at the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center Atlan- tic. “Swarm technologies are sort of in an immature state, and we’re trying
to evolve them and figure out how these systems can be used collabora- tively.”
The project, which
launched in summer
2016, culminated in a live fly-off between two teams at Camp Roberts, a training base for the California Na- tional Guard.
Each team sent 10 propeller-driven fixed-wing Zephyr drones skyward with instructions to attack any enemies encountered. Although the drones were configured identically, they were equipped with different tactical and communications software that had been developed by the two
teams. They also deployed DJI quad- copters equipped with video cameras.
Knaus said SASC is so far tack-
ling only one piece of the puzzle in developing drones’ swarm fighting ca- pabilities. He added that more work needs to be done to create drones that cost less while having longer flight times and greater load-carrying capabilities.
“But it definitely provides insight when you get out there and see it,” he said.
GCN OCTOBER/NOVEMBER 2017 • GCN.COM 45
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