The rise of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) is driving the development on unmanned technologies in other areas. Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are becoming so commonplace that the FAA is hard-pressed to come up with regulations to control their operations. Unmanned marine vehicles, meanwhile, are becoming a hot technology topic, as military researchers push a program […]
The rise of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) is driving the development on unmanned technologies in other areas. Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are becoming so commonplace that the FAA is hard-pressed to come up with regulations to control their operations.
Unmanned marine vehicles, meanwhile, are becoming a hot technology topic, as military researchers push a program forward to develop a long-endurance unmanned underwater submarine.
The experts are scheduled to report on this project on October 16 at Alion Science and Technology Inc.
On the schedule of the briefings:
LDUUV vision and missions
program schedule
budget
technology risks and payoff
technology development and transfer
employment
operations
testing requirements
Q & A session
You can register by emailing Navy’s Ron Merlene at ronald.merlene@navy.milRead more here.
One thought on “Large Displacement Unmanned Undersea Vehicle (LDUUV)- Experts To Report On October 16, 2013”
I would offer that a more cost-effective approach would be that, instead of LDUUV’s, permanent underwater platforms with an array of acoustic sensors be built and strategically situated into the ocean side of our continental shelf from Maine to Mexico, and Alaska to Baja California for ISR. And, that submarine-launched and controlled UUV’s continue to be modernized to keep up with state-of-the-art technologies—not only for recon and surveillance, but for weapons delivery and guidance.
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I would offer that a more cost-effective approach would be that, instead of LDUUV’s, permanent underwater platforms with an array of acoustic sensors be built and strategically situated into the ocean side of our continental shelf from Maine to Mexico, and Alaska to Baja California for ISR. And, that submarine-launched and controlled UUV’s continue to be modernized to keep up with state-of-the-art technologies—not only for recon and surveillance, but for weapons delivery and guidance.