Enhancing combat survivability of existing unmanned aircraft systems

The importance of Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) to warfighters has been growing. Each loss (regardless of whether the entire UAS or parts of it) has become more expensive and unaffordable in both an operational and monetary sense. An unmanned aircraft (UA) loss may mean that critical missions can...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tham, Kine Seng
Other Authors: Langford, Gary O.
Published: Monterey, California 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/3734
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-37342014-11-27T16:04:47Z Enhancing combat survivability of existing unmanned aircraft systems Tham, Kine Seng Langford, Gary O. Vaidyanathan, Ravi Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.) The importance of Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) to warfighters has been growing. Each loss (regardless of whether the entire UAS or parts of it) has become more expensive and unaffordable in both an operational and monetary sense. An unmanned aircraft (UA) loss may mean that critical missions cannot be performed and millions of dollars of investments on the UA lost. As most existing UAS were designed to be inexpensive and expendable, there is a need to enhance their combat survivability. Combat survivability is the capability of UAS to avoid or withstand a man-made hostile environment. This thesis explored how to enhance the combat survivability of existing UAS. Potential survivability enhancement options are identified. These options include changes in tactics, improving the situation awareness of the operator, equipping the UA with the capability to counter an incoming threat, improving the payload performance, improving resistance of the data link to jamming. The technology behind these options as well as the favorable and unfavorable factors of the options are studied and discussed. This thesis also proposed a process for selecting the "best" solution from survivability enhancement alternatives. This thesis used systems engineering methodology to enhance the survivability of existing UAS. 2012-03-14T17:39:14Z 2012-03-14T17:39:14Z 2008-12 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/3734 309274829 Approved for public release, distribution unlimited Monterey, California Naval Postgraduate School
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
description The importance of Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) to warfighters has been growing. Each loss (regardless of whether the entire UAS or parts of it) has become more expensive and unaffordable in both an operational and monetary sense. An unmanned aircraft (UA) loss may mean that critical missions cannot be performed and millions of dollars of investments on the UA lost. As most existing UAS were designed to be inexpensive and expendable, there is a need to enhance their combat survivability. Combat survivability is the capability of UAS to avoid or withstand a man-made hostile environment. This thesis explored how to enhance the combat survivability of existing UAS. Potential survivability enhancement options are identified. These options include changes in tactics, improving the situation awareness of the operator, equipping the UA with the capability to counter an incoming threat, improving the payload performance, improving resistance of the data link to jamming. The technology behind these options as well as the favorable and unfavorable factors of the options are studied and discussed. This thesis also proposed a process for selecting the "best" solution from survivability enhancement alternatives. This thesis used systems engineering methodology to enhance the survivability of existing UAS.
author2 Langford, Gary O.
author_facet Langford, Gary O.
Tham, Kine Seng
author Tham, Kine Seng
spellingShingle Tham, Kine Seng
Enhancing combat survivability of existing unmanned aircraft systems
author_sort Tham, Kine Seng
title Enhancing combat survivability of existing unmanned aircraft systems
title_short Enhancing combat survivability of existing unmanned aircraft systems
title_full Enhancing combat survivability of existing unmanned aircraft systems
title_fullStr Enhancing combat survivability of existing unmanned aircraft systems
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing combat survivability of existing unmanned aircraft systems
title_sort enhancing combat survivability of existing unmanned aircraft systems
publisher Monterey, California
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/3734
work_keys_str_mv AT thamkineseng enhancingcombatsurvivabilityofexistingunmannedaircraftsystems
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