US military gives go ahead to ‘Gremlin’ drones

Daily News Article   —   Posted on April 6, 2016

(by Mark Prigg and Richard Gray, UK Daily Mail) – The US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has given the go ahead for four defense contractors to begin building “Gremlin” drones.

Darpa said the program has been deliberately named Gremlins after the imps that British pilots adopted as their good luck charms during Wold War Two.

Composite Engineering, Dynetics, General Atomics Aeronautical Systems and Lockheed Martin will develop the drones.

The program envisions launching groups of Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) from existing large aircraft such as bombers or transport aircraft – as well as from fighters and other small, fixed-wing platforms – while those planes are out of range of adversary defenses.

When the gremlins complete their mission, a C-130 transport aircraft would retrieve them in the air and carry them home, where ground crews would prepare them for their next use within 24 hours.

The gremlins’ expected lifetime of about 20 uses could provide significant cost advantages over expendable systems (such as missiles) by reducing payload and airframe costs and by having lower mission and maintenance costs than conventional platforms, which are designed to operate for decades.

“We’ve assembled a motivated group of researchers and developers that we believe could make significant progress toward Gremlins’ vision of delivering distributed airborne capabilities in a robust, responsive and affordable manner,” said Dan Patt, DARPA program manager.

“These teams are exploring different, innovative approaches toward achieving this goal and are rolling up their sleeves for the hard work ahead.”

The idea is to replace the expensive and increasingly vulnerable multi-function combat aircraft which currently perform a range of different missions.

Instead they propose deploying from the air smaller unmanned aircraft, each with different capabilities, to perform a mission before retrieving them mid-air so they can be used again.

Not only would the concept remove the risk to pilots by keeping them out of the front line but it would also drastically reduce the cost of each aircraft.

Mr. Patt of Darpa, said: “Our goal is to conduct a compelling proof-of-concept flight demonstration that could employ intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) and other modular, non-kinetic payloads in a robust, responsive and affordable manner.”

The Gremlins would be launched in mid-air from larger aircraft and then retrieved in the same way.

The agency is hoping to build on its automated mid-air refuelling technology alongside the sea based platforms for capturing drones as they come into land.

Mr. Patt said: “We wouldn’t be discarding the entire airframe, engine, avionics and payload with every mission, as is done with missiles.”

He further explained, “But we also wouldn’t have to carry the maintainability and operational cost burdens of today’s reusable systems, which are meant to stay in service for decades.”

In its briefing, the agency said it hopes that by using cheap drone aircraft it would be possible to overwhelm the increasingly sophisticated defenses of enemies.

It said: “As part of a future concept of operations, it is envisioned that instead of using conventional, monolithic systems to conduct missions in denied environments, multiple platforms with coordinated and distributed warfighting functions can be employed to saturate adversary defenses while achieving mission objectives.”

Reprinted here from London’s Daily Mail for educational purposes only.  May not be reproduced on other websites without permission from the Daily Mail.



Background

Key enabling technologies for the Gremlins program include:

The idea is to use conventional aircraft hosts to transport and launch a volley of gremlins from stand-off ranges. Researchers want to scale-up the number of UAVs such that a loss of any individual drone is reduced as a result of the collaboration between vehicles. (from militaryaerospace .com)