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Defence
DARPA eyes low-cost, reusable Gremlins
DARPA eyes low-cost, reusable Gremlins
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| Staff writer 301 mots

DARPA eyes low-cost, reusable Gremlins

The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has awarded Phase 1 contracts for its Gremlins programme, which seeks to develop innovative technologies and systems enabling aircraft to launch groups of low-cost, reusable unmanned air systems (UASs) and safely and reliably retrieve them in mid-air.

Such systems, or “gremlins,” would be deployed with a mixture of mission payloads capable of generating a variety of effects in a distributed and coordinated manner, providing improved operational flexibility at a lower cost than is possible with conventional, monolithic platforms.

The Phase 1 contracts have been awarded to four teams whose proposals cover different technical approaches to the mission. The teams are led by Composite Engineering, Dynetics, General Atomics Aeronautical Systems and Lockheed Martin.

Phase 1 of the programme is designed to prepare for a proof-of-concept flight demonstration that would validate an air recovery concept of multiple gremlins. The programme plans to explore numerous technical areas, including:

  • launch and recovery techniques, equipment and aircraft integration concepts,
  • low-cost, limited-life airframe designs that leverage existing technology and require only modest modifications to current aircraft,
  • high-fidelity analysis, precision digital flight control, relative navigation and station keeping.

The programme envisions launching groups of UASs from existing large aircraft such as bombers or transport aircraft — as well as from fighters and other small, fixed-wing platforms — while those planes are out of range of adversary defences. When the gremlins complete their mission, a C-130 transport aircraft would retrieve them in the air and carry them home, where ground crews would prepare them for their next use within 24 hours.

The gremlins’ expected lifetime of about 20 uses could provide significant cost advantages over expendable systems by reducing payload and airframe costs and by having lower mission and maintenance costs than conventional platforms, which are designed to operate for decades.


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