(08 September 2022, 11:37 +07)
Boeing has demonstrated a new open autonomy
architecture for MQ-25 that will allow the U.S. Navy to increase
mission effectiveness by integrating manned-unmanned teaming
(MUM-T) capability at speed and scale.
The non-proprietary architecture, based on the
government-owned Open Mission System specification, is the
foundation for advanced MUM-T.
A Boeing-led team virtually
demonstrated how other aircraft can use MQ-25’s architecture and
task it to conduct tanking and intelligence, surveillance and
reconnaissance (ISR) missions – all within the mission airspace
and without traditional communications with the ship-based ground
control station.
Boeing’s MUM-T demonstration included Northrop
Grumman’s E-2D Advanced Hawkeye command and control aircraft,
Boeing’s P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol and reconnaissance aircraft
and Boeing’s F/A-18 Block III Super Hornet fighter jet.
A simulated F/A-18 Super Hornet interacts with a simulated MQ-25.
Using
their existing operational flight program software and data links,
the aircraft tasked four virtual,
autonomous MQ-25s to conduct ISR missions.
The F/A-18 also used
its advanced tactical data links and Boeing’s conceptual “Project
Black Ice” crew vehicle interface, which significantly reduced
aircrew workload.
“Large swaths of ocean could be surveilled,
identified and targeted when MQ-25 is teamed with carrier-based
assets such as the E-2D or the land-based P-8A patrol aircraft,”
said Don “BD” Gaddis, director, MQ-25 Advanced Design. “Through
this demonstration, our customers saw how this digital, open
approach to MUM-T is key to fielding critical warfighting
capability at much lower cost and with greater speed and agility.”
The demonstration showed how both the
P-8A and E-2D could easily task an MQ-25 teammate with an ISR
mission specifying only the search area and no-fly zones.
Using an
onboard autonomy framework developed by Boeing subsidiary Aurora
Flight Sciences, the MQ-25 autonomously did the rest – including
validating the command against its operational constraints,
planning its route and conducting its search pattern, among many
other tasks.
Aurora also created and demonstrated a prototype
platform abstraction layer – a software boundary that decouples
MQ-25’s flight safety and flight critical components from mission
software and sensor hardware. This commercial best practice allows
third-party “app” integration on MQ-25.
Using an Aurora-provided
software development kit, Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft
Division created a new radar search application for MQ-25 that was
successfully used during the demonstration.
“Aurora's robust software development kit enables
our Navy teammates to rapidly integrate new capabilities,” said
Graham Drozeski, vice president of Government Programs for Aurora
Flight Sciences. “The platform abstraction demonstration met test
objectives for resource sharing between multiple onboard systems
and supervisors, and these efforts will greatly reduce government
test and certification costs as new capabilities are added over
time.”
The demonstration was aligned to the future
warfighting capabilities in the Navy’s Unmanned Campaign
Framework.
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