Back to news

March 23, 2024 | International, Naval

RTXs Raytheon awarded $1.2 billion contract to provide Patriot air and missile defense systems to Germany

These systems will augment Germany's existing air defense infrastructure with additional Patriot equipment.

https://www.epicos.com/article/793856/rtxs-raytheon-awarded-12-billion-contract-provide-patriot-air-and-missile-defense

On the same subject

  • Dassault Aviation a notifié à Thales la fourniture du radar de surveillance Searchmaster pour le programme AVSIMAR

    September 22, 2021 | International, C4ISR

    Dassault Aviation a notifié à Thales la fourniture du radar de surveillance Searchmaster pour le programme AVSIMAR

    DÉFENSE Dassault Aviation a notifié à Thales la fourniture du radar de surveillance Searchmaster pour le programme AVSIMAR Thales annonce que Dassault Aviation lui a notifié la fourniture du radar de surveillance Searchmaster pour le programme AVSIMAR, ainsi que du système de navigation de mission. Le programme AVSIMAR, sous la maîtrise d'ouvrage de la Direction générale de l'armement et la maîtrise d'œuvre de Dassault Aviation, permettra de renouveler la flotte des avions de surveillance et d'intervention maritimes de la Marine nationale via l'acquisition de 12 Falcon 2000 Albatros de Dassault Aviation. Face à la densité croissante du trafic maritime, « les meilleures capacités de surveillance maritime en zones côtières et littorales sont primordiales pour repérer et suivre des cibles intelligentes et agiles, quels que soient les états de mer et les conditions de visibilité », explique Thales. Les Falcon 2000 Albatros bénéficieront, gr'ce à l'ensemble des équipements fournis, « d'un degré de précision et d'une sensibilité de détection qui pourront alerter par anticipation de la présence d'une menace à la surface de la mer, et garantir ainsi une capacité d'action adaptée », précise le groupe. Zone Militaire et Naval Technology du 22 septembre

  • A Senate panel wants to spend an extra $400 million on microelectronics

    June 29, 2018 | International, C4ISR

    A Senate panel wants to spend an extra $400 million on microelectronics

    By: Daniel Cebul When the Senate Appropriations subcommittee on defense released a summary of their spending priorities June 26, the bill included a significant increase for one emerging technology. The panel recommended setting aside an additional $447 million for microelectronics. Specifically, the committee wanted to ensure the Department of Defense has access to trusted microelectronics and can develop manufacturing processes for next-generation microprocessor chips. To do so, the bill raised the fiscal year 2019 research, development, testing and evaluation budget for microelectronic technology from $169 million in the president's fiscal year 2019 budget request to $616 million. Already, concern about the domestic production of microelectronics is expected to be part of a large defense industrial base review now underway. But what exactly are microelectronics, and why is their development worth so much to DoD? Microelectronic chips are essentially integrated electric circuits that regulate energy consumption, and perform complex computations that enable capabilities like global positioning systems, radar and command and control. Imagine all of the components that go into your computer ― memory, graphics processors, wifi modules, etc ― all on a single silicon chip, called a wafer. eading-edge wafers typically are 300 mm in diameter and loaded with transistors, resistors, insulators and conductors that control the flow of electrons (read electrical energy) across the chip. The smaller and smaller these components are, specifically transistors, the more can be fit on a chip, enabling faster and more efficient processing. Transistors themselves are measured in nanometers (nm), and are unfathomably small to most non-scientists and engineers. One nanometer equates to a billionth of meter! To put that into perspective, the average diameter of a human hair is 75,000 nm. The most cutting-edge transistors used in microelectronics measure between 10 and 7 nm, and are expected to get smaller in coming years. Smaller and smaller transistors will contribute to breakthroughs in “machine learning, data sorting for recognition of events, and countering electromagnetic threats,” according to a Defense Advance Research Project Agency backgrounder. Because Pentagon leaders believe this technology is vital for current and future capabilities, technology officials say it is important DoD can trust microelectronics are reliable and secure from adversary attacks and sabotage. For this reason, DARPA launched the five-year, up to $200 million Electronics Resurgence Initiative in September 2017 “to nurture research in advanced new materials, circuit design tools, and system architectures.” A key thrust of this initiative is partnership with top universities through the Joint University Microelectronics Program, or JUMP. The program enlists top researchers to work on proejcts like cognitive computing, secure cellular infrastructure to support autonomous vehicles and intelligent highways and other technologies enabled by microelectronics. Under the Senate defense subcommittee's markup, ERI received an additional $30 million to help “reestablish U.S. primacy in assured microelectronics technology.” https://www.c4isrnet.com/it-networks/2018/06/28/a-senate-panel-wants-to-spend-an-extra-400-million-on-microelectronics/

  • Pentagon requests 30-day extension for re-awarding JEDI

    August 12, 2020 | International, C4ISR, Security

    Pentagon requests 30-day extension for re-awarding JEDI

    Andrew Eversden WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Defense has requested 30 extra days to review vendor proposals as it prepares to make another award decision for its massive enterprise cloud contract, according to a Monday night court filing. The DoD is currently reviewing new revised proposals for its Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure contract, which it awarded to Microsoft over Amazon Web Services in October last year. In the filing, the DoD said that it “recently identified the need to reopen limited discussions related to certain aspects of the offerors' pricing proposals.” The request, made in the Court of Federal Claims, is yet another delay for the controversial JEDI cloud. The department was supposed to re-award the contract by Aug. 17 after receiving a 120-day stay to take corrective action on the contract. It's now asking to delay that decision to Sept. 16. “During the remand, DoD has identified areas of concern with respect to the revised proposals received from both offerors, resulting in multiple solicitation amendments, rounds of proposal revisions, and exchanges with the offerors,” the court filing said. AWS, which filed the protest late last year in the Court of Federal Claims after losing the contract, argues that the department made several technical errors while evaluating its proposal and also accuses President Donald Trump of political interference in the contract. AWS does not oppose the Pentagon's new motion, the court document said. In late July, DoD CIO Dana Deasy told reporters that the DoD would “probably sometimes towards the very end of August, barring any last minute, unforeseen additional issues that are raised.” The court filing says that the department “anticipates” that the re-evaluation process will wrap up in early September. The JEDI cloud has been delayed continuously throughout the entirety of the procurement process. Last year, the initial award decision was delayed for months due to a pre-award protest by Oracle. Earlier this year work on JEDI was further delayed when the court placed a temporary restraining order on any work on the JEDI cloud, finding that AWS was “likely to succeed” in proving DoD erred in the evaluation process. https://www.c4isrnet.com/battlefield-tech/it-networks/2020/08/11/pentagon-requests-30-day-extension-for-re-awarding-jedi/

All news