DocumentCode
1965181
Title
Small unit unmanned weapon system for today´s army
Author
Carier, Julia D. ; Smith, Earnest D. ; Wade, Andrew M. ; Walker, Paul S. ; Kwinn, Michael J., Jr.
Author_Institution
United States Mil. Acad., West Point
fYear
2007
fDate
27-27 April 2007
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
5
Abstract
While engaged in the Global War on Terror, our soldiers have discovered the need at the small unit level for a non-line of sight, man portable, lethal, unmanned device that could be used to gain entry into a building by blowing the door, kill enemy personnel or disable soft skinned vehicles without a soldier ever exposing himself to the enemy and while minimizing collateral damage. This capability could potentially save soldiers lives and increase the combat effectiveness of our units currently deployed in combat zones. Our project team will evaluate several alternatives and provide a recommended solution for such a device to provide these capabilities to the soldier on the ground. Currently, the US Army - specifically special operations command (SOCOM) and the US Marine Corps operate with small and unmanned surveillance equipment. None of these systems however have a lethal component. Additionally, they are currently all operated primarily at the company or battalion level. Other unmanned ariel vehicles are equipped with a lethal capability but they are too heavy and require too large a launch footprint to be effectively employed by small unit ground forces. FMI 3-04.155 (army unmanned aircraft system operations) is the current field manual which outlines the effective employment of current UAS in the inventory [3]. Currently, there is a noticeable capability void which can be best addressed by a system which incorporates the flexibility of a smaller man portable UAV with the lethality of one of the larger systems. Our study seeks to find a solution which will address this capability void.
Keywords
aircraft control; military systems; remotely operated vehicles; surveillance; terrorism; weapons; US Marine Corps; army unmanned aircraft system operation; combat zone; portable UAV; small unit unmanned weapon system; special operations command; unmanned ariel vehicles; unmanned surveillance equipment; Fires; Missiles; Personnel; Research and development; Security; Silver; Surveillance; Systems engineering and theory; Unmanned aerial vehicles; Weapons;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Systems and Information Engineering Design Symposium, 2007. SIEDS 2007. IEEE
Conference_Location
Charlottesville, VA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1285-3
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-1286-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/SIEDS.2007.4373996
Filename
4373996
Link To Document