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WHITE SANDS, N.M. (Dec. 15, 2009) -- The Army recently completed
networked operational tests of the first pairing of its developmental
Common Controller device with equipment now used by Soldiers in theater
from the Land Warrior effort.
This network capability could prove critical in rural areas where
vehicles cannot traverse, and during the period of time when the
brigade network is being established, according to Army officials
involved in brigade combat team modernization.
Termed the "Common Controller & Man packable Network
Interoperability and Network Evaluation Experiment," the effort
represents the first connection of the Army's Common Controller with
equipment from the Land Warrior effort.
"With this experiment we were able to link the existing Soldier network
made possible through the Land Warrior effort to the future network
being developed through the Program Executive Office Integration," said
Lt. Col. James McNulty, product manager for the Common Controller team.
"In doing so we proved three very important things," McNulty said.
"First, we were able to push data and imagery collected by networked
sensors down to small unit leaders at the company and below level.
Second, we connected platoons and companies together and finally we
were able to send data and real-time information up into the network."
Individual Soldier battlefield awareness was enhanced as sensor data
was successfully passed from assets like the Small Unmanned Ground
Vehicle to small Land Warrior-equipped units. From there, because of
the Land Warrior gear, the information was able to pass from one small
Land Warrior unit to another, McNulty said.
Further, the critical information passed in real time from the small
unit to the battalion and above level as well as the reverse, he said.
"This network evaluation demonstrated both horizontal, or small-unit
sharing abilities as well as vertical or company-and-above sharing
capabilities," McNulty said.
The Common Controller used in the experiment is under development to
serve as a controller for many different brigade combat team unmanned
networked systems.
Today, the Army does not have a networked central control device for
various unmanned platforms and sensors within the brigade combat team
construct so several different remote controls are necessary, officials
said.
The Common Controller can control the Class I Unmanned Aerial System,
the Multifunctional Utility/Logistics Equipment vehicle known as the
MULE, the Small Unmanned Ground Vehicle or SUGV, and Urban Unattended
Ground Sensors known as U-UGS.
These unmanned, networked assets are designed to provide unprecedented
battlefield situational awareness at the company level by sending
imagery, video and data to a networked vehicle for analysis, PEO
Integration officials said.
From a networked vehicle, an operator can send the data and imagery to
a remote tactical operations center where company commanders can
analyze and act.
Currently this kind of networked communication for sensor assets exists at the battalion and above levels only, McNulty said.
"Here we went beyond passing information from networked vehicles to the
tactical operations centers," McNulty said, "and we were able to
significantly reduce the process of information transfer that typically
takes place when you want to link an individual Soldier into what's
happening on the ground,
"By linking the abilities of the Common Controller with a Land
Warrior-equipped platoon, you can really give Soldiers a full sense of
what's happening on the battlefield," he said.
Land Warrior is a battle-proven, modular fighting system that currently
provides Soldiers of the 5th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division in
Afghanistan with essential battlefield network connectivity.
Land Warrior is composed of computer, communications and global
positioning technologies that digitally link individual Soldiers on the
battlefield with each other. It is integrated with the Soldier's body
armor and has a helmet-mounted display that shows where friendly and
enemy forces are located.
As a surrogate to the Ground Soldier System, Land Warrior will continue
to provide individual Soldiers in critical operational areas with
battlefield network access until the highly capable Ground Soldier
System is fielded, PEO Integration officials said.
In the experiment, a Common Controller operator deployed a robot to
perform reconnaissance around a building. Through the small robot's
video camera, the operator observed a man exit a vehicle that appeared
to be loaded with explosives.
The operator captured the suspect's image and sent it, along with a
text report to a Land Warrior-equipped platoon, which in turn set up a
road block and captured the suspects.
"This successful effort is illustrative of several program executive
offices and TRADOC capabilities managers working together to build a
single, integrated high-performing network for the Army," said Col. Ken
Carrick, project manager for Network Systems Integration.
Source and credits : http://www.army.mil/-news/2009/12/30/32396-army-experiments-to-increase-network-connectivity-for-soldiers/
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