错误633DoD Unmanned Systems Integrated Roadmap FY2013-2038
December 31, 2013
The following roadmap was relead on December 24, 2013 by the Department of Defen.
Unmanned Systems Integrated Roadmap FY2013-2038
∙168 pages
高崇文∙December 2013
∙4.4 MB
Unmanned systems continue to deliver new and enhanced battlefield capabilities to the warfighter. While the demand for unmanned systems continues unabated today, a number of factors will influence unmanned program development in the future. Three primary forces
are driving the Department of Defen’s (DoD) approach in planning for and developing unmanned systems.
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1. Combat operations in Southwest Asia have demonstrated the military utility of unmanned systems on today’s battlefields and have resulted in the expeditious integration of unmanned technologies into the joint force structure. However, the systems and technologies currently fielded to fulfill today’s urgent operational needs must be further expanded (as described in this Roadmap) and appropriately integrated into Military Department programs of record (POR) to achieve the levels of effectiveness, efficiency, affordability, commonality, interoperability, integration, and other key parameters needed to meet future operational requirements.
2. Downward economic forces will continue to constrain Military Department budgets for the foreeable future. Achieving affordable and cost-effective technical solutions is imperative in this fiscally constrained environment.
元宵节英语3. The changing national curity environment pos unique challenges. A strategic shift i
n national curity to the Asia-Pacific Theater prents different operational considerations bad on environment and potential adversary capabilities that may require unmanned systems to operate in anti-access/area denial (A2/AD) areas where freedom to operate is contested. Similarly, any reallocation of unmanned asts to support other combatant commanders (CCDRs) entails its own t of unique challenges, which will likely require unmanned systems to operate in more complex environments involving weather, terrain, distance, and airspace while necessitating extensive coordination with allies and host nations.
The combination of the primary forces requires further innovative technical solutions that are effective yet affordable for program development.
The purpo of this Roadmap is to articulate a vision and strategy for the continued development, production, test, training, operation, and sustainment of unmanned systems technology across DoD. This “Unmanned Systems Integrated Roadmap” establishes a technological vision for the next 25 years and outlines actions and technolo
实木多层地板好吗gies for DoD and industry to pursue to intelligently and affordably align with this vision. The Roadmap articulates this vision and strategy in eight chapters:
Chapter 1: Introduction— This chapter explains the Roadmap’s purpo and scope. It examines the current unmanned environment from an inventory and budget perspective while also surveying the potential future environment. The chapter includes an operational vignette to show potential future capabilities using some of the technologies described later in this Roadmap. Also, the chapter explains the reduction in budget over the next five years beginning with the President’s Budget request for $5.6 billion in unmanned systems in Fiscal Year 2013. In fact, the unmanned air domain as described in the 2014 President’s Budget relead to the U.S. Congress shows a 33.4% reduction in rearch, development, test, and evaluation and procurement funding from the previous year.
Chapter 2: Strategic Planning and Policy— This chapter expounds on the structure, direction, and established guidance from DoD leadership toward planning and developing
unmanned systems. It briefly discuss some of the prevailing unmanned issues of the day and express departmental direction in their resolution.
Chapter 3: CCDR Mission and Capability Needs — A joint perspective emerges in this chapter through a discussion of mission capabilities unique to unmanned systems and an explanation of the requirements process ud to deliberately develop tho capabilities to achieve improved efficiency, effectiveness, and survivability and to reduce the burden on manpower at lower costs while still meeting future operational requirements. The perspective establishes that future unmanned systems must
• Provide capabilities more efficiently through such attributes as modularity, interoperability, integration with manned systems, and u of advanced technologies.
• Be more effective through features such as greater automation, improved performance, and flexible u of capabilities.太原飞机场
在旅途中• Be more survivable in contested environments through improved and resilient communications, incread curity from tampering, and system design.
• Reduce manpower requirements to operate and support unmanned systems.
Chapter 4: Technologies for Unmanned Systems— Certain key areas of interest for improving technology reflect DoD’s shift in strategic priorities and address the requirement to continue to reduce lifecycle costs across all systems, including unmanned systems. The six areas of interest highlighted in this chapter are interoperability and modularity; communication systems, spectrum, and resilience; curity (rearch and intelligence/technology protection (RITP)); persistent resilience; autonomy and cognitive behavior; and weaponry. This chapter also describes how limited science and technology funding will potentially impact such emerging technology solutions.
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