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GA-ASI Conducts Captive Carry Demos for SPARROWHAWK sUAS

Focused on attritableONE and Airborne Recovery Technologies

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. (GA-ASI) conducted captive carry SPARROWHAWK small UAS (sUAS) flight demonstrations on 16-17 September, the company announced on 25 September.

SPARROWHAWK is designed as an airborne launch and recovery demonstrator aircraft tailored to fit GA-ASI platforms, and is focused on Advanced Battle Management System’s attritableONE technologies. It iterates on the DARPA GREMLINS programme to further airborne recovery of sUAS, reducing the cost of operation and enabling new mission capabilities for GA-ASI’s MQ-9 remotely-piloted aircraft (RPA).

SPARROWHAWK extends and multiplies MQ-9-based sensors, reduces manpower and increases ISR coverage,” explained GA-ASI President David R Alexander. “With attritableONE technology that is survivable and precise, SPARROWHAWK is a true game changer.”

The sUAS was carried on an MQ-9A and controlled exclusively using GA-ASI’s Metis Software-Defined Control Station hosted on a laptop computer, which drastically reduced the system’s logistical footprint and supports the vision for interfaces to the aircraft from across the battlefield — without the need for a ground control station shelter or vehicle. Communications were achieved using a fielded meshONE datalink, enabling collaborative autonomy capabilities among the platforms. The Cooperation in Denied Environments (CODE) autonomy engine was implemented to further understand cognitive artificial intelligence (AI) processing for unmanned systems.

The test flights build on the capabilities demonstrated when GRAY EAGLE carried two Area-I Altius-600 Air Launched Effects (ALEs) during recent demonstrations of Multi-Domain Operations (MDO), underscoring GA-ASI’s commitment to expanding the capabilities of its aircraft.

SPARROWHAWK and airborne recovery also enable the following benefits:

• Allows below-the-weather ISR, and enables reduced visual and acoustic ISR;

• Enables attritable ISR/EW in contested environments, allowing the MQ-9 to stand off at safe ranges;

• Employs larger and more expensive payloads at greater transit ranges compared to ground-launched aircraft and air-launched expendables;

• Maintains the chain of custody through adverse weather, MQ-9 rotations, or with multiple targets.

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Publish date

09/28/2020

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