• DocumentCode
    1460602
  • Title

    Aerospace and military [Technology 1999 analysis and forecast]

  • Author

    Braham, R.

  • Volume
    36
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    1999
  • Firstpage
    73
  • Lastpage
    78
  • Abstract
    The Pentagon is making good on its new slogans of situational awareness and the age of the digital battlefield. These phrases signify, in essence, a revolutionary change in the time-honored concept of thousands of soldiers toiling as one, both to fight physically and to render information upwards. Many of the same tasks will be done by an astounding diversity of new "assets"-humans and machines. If the Pentagon devotes equal or more attention to technologies that fuse, filter, and coherently present the overflow of received data, the tactical and strategic opportunities offered by the following systems can only increase. In a sense, new Pentagon designs systematically blur the distinction between the destructive power of weapons and active intelligence agents that facilitate that power. Thus, autonomous weapons of the new type may gather signal intelligence and distribute it to assets it chooses, like a human intelligence agent of old, and phalanxes of unmanned platforms move through unknown environments either as scouts or as fighters, avoiding obstacles and releasing weapons as they choose. Some unmanned air reconnaissance platforms mentioned can traverse continents, and may bulk up to tele-operated attack jets or shrink to butterfly-sized aircraft humming along by themselves. On the field, mines are mutating into wide-area networks of robotic munitions launchers. Thinking even smaller, engineers have come up with networked tell-tale radio-frequency tags and data communications for rifles.
  • Keywords
    artificial intelligence; military avionics; military communication; military systems; technological forecasting; telerobotics; weapons; Pentagon; active intelligence agents; aerospace technology; autonomous weapons; butterfly-sized aircraft; data communications; digital battlefield; fighters; military technology; mines; networked tell-tale radio-frequency tags; rifles; robotic munitions launchers; scouts; signal intelligence; strategic opportunities; tactical opportunities; tele-operated attack jets; unmanned air reconnaissance platforms; unmanned platforms; weapon destructive power; wide-area networks; Aircraft propulsion; Continents; Filters; Fuses; Humans; Intelligent agent; Reconnaissance; Robots; Technology forecasting; Weapons;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Spectrum, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9235
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/6.738330
  • Filename
    738330