ย A joint demonstration involving multiple defense agencies and several aerospace companies proved that smart phone technology can be used to improve battlefield awareness.
A tactical digital network, featuring advanced digital radios, hand-held cellular smart phones, a helicopter-mounted โcell tower in the skyโ and a boarding party in the Chesapeake Bay recently completed a joint interoperability demonstration.
โThis is a big deal because until recently, weโve not been able to communicate between devices in a tactical networked environment without extensive preplanning and coordination,โ said Cmdr. Chris McMahan, Naval Aviation Center for Rotorcraft Advancement demonstration coordinator. โTodayโs data links are mostly point-to-point networks where ad hoc connections arenโt possible.”
Participating teams displayed ad hoc data sharing on a simulated battlefield in a December exercise by using hand-held cellular smart phones to send and receive real-time video, voice and text sharing between a small-boat team on the Bay and the Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Divisionโs Surface/Aviation Interoperability Laboratory.
The participating teams included NACRA, SAIL, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and aerospace companies Northrop Grumman and Rockwell Collins.
โItโs the same idea as accessing the Internet from a smart phone or a Wi-Fi-capable notebook to share email or a video with a friend,โ explained McMahan. โThe Internet doesnโt care what your device is as long as it uses the right protocols. This is the same thing, only weโre doing it encrypted in a tactical environment where we have to bring our own mobile cell tower mounted on the helicopter.โ
And while that might seem routine for civilian Internet users, itโs challenging in a secure tactical arena.
โWeโre trying to achieve โplatform agnosticism,โ where you donโt have to preplan participation,โ McMahan added. โMuch like how weโre able to access the Internet via any number of available devices and modes, we wanted to demo an encrypted tactical network where the data is important and the devices are relatively transparent.โ
Specific network capabilities included Quint Networking Technology, 4G/LTE wireless networks, L band, C band and UHF radios, PRC-117G radios, Blue Force Tracker and a 3G/4G LTE transmitter mounted on one of NACRAโs testbed helicopters.
Key to the demo was DARPAโs Tactical Targeted Network Technologies — an Internet Protocol (IP) based, high-speed, dynamic, ad hoc network hosted by the Rockwell-Collins QNT networking radios. The Naval Air Warfare Centerโs SAIL acted as a ship, providing a sea-based node to the network, demonstrating the ability to access an IP-based network from the sea.
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