12 septembre 2022 | International, Terrestre

Simulation sandbox can speed development of uncrewed military vehicles

AI-based simulations can shorten testing periods by running thousands of different scenarios simultaneously.

https://www.c4isrnet.com/opinion/2022/09/06/simulation-sandbox-can-speed-development-of-uncrewed-military-vehicles/

Sur le même sujet

  • Can soldiers use their own movement, marching to charge the batteries they carry? The Army’s working on it

    7 septembre 2018 | International, Terrestre

    Can soldiers use their own movement, marching to charge the batteries they carry? The Army’s working on it

    By: Todd South Scientists with the Army's communications and electronic research group are looking to the soldier's own footsteps, and other means, to potentially increase battery life and lighten the load for increasingly tech-laden troops. Army researchers are forecasting that the battery load for a dismounted soldier could double by 2025, given the need for more sophisticated and powerful electronic systems being used by soldiers. That load currently runs from 15 to 25 pounds for a three-day mission, no small amount when every ounce counts, and soldiers will strip rations and cut a toothbrush handle to save weight. New battery and power requirements could come from augmented reality equipment and the more sophisticated Next Generation Squad Weapon program, which will add new targeting capabilities to the soldier's rifle but also need power that's not there now. Julianne Douglas, the Energy Harvest lead with the Army's Communications-Electronics Research, Development and Engineering Center said in an Army release that the “added weight means soldiers can get fatigued much more easily, are more susceptible to injury and are less able to maneuver nimbly.” Full article: https://www.armytimes.com/news/your-army/2018/09/06/can-soldiers-use-their-own-movement-marching-to-charge-the-batteries-they-carry-the-armys-working-on-it

  • Delay hits Brazil's $1.7 billion frigate program

    6 mai 2022 | International, Naval

    Delay hits Brazil's $1.7 billion frigate program

    Construction of the first of four Tamandaré-class frigates for the Brazilian Navy is delayed, with the shipbuilding timeline slipping from last month to this September, and commissioning potentially being pushed from 2025 to 2026.

  • AI-powered surveillance sought for US Central Command

    31 janvier 2023 | International, C4ISR

    AI-powered surveillance sought for US Central Command

    Components of the future surveillance network will likely include cameras and other hardware, automated alerts, geospatial tracking and virtual twins.

Toutes les nouvelles