2020-10-16 智邦网
编译 致远
据c4isr网10月15日报道,美陆军作战能力开发司令部“创新激发小组”组建一年来,作为陆军未来与概念中心与军种作战部门之间的桥梁,致力于开发到2035年赋予作战部队战场竞争优势的潜在能力、全新技术。
小组重点组织与陆军未来概念创新和作战人员相关的“深潜技术”研发。
司令部司令约翰·乔治少将宣布,自成立以来,小组组织了17次深潜技术研讨,科技主管就新技术和现有能力的技术成熟度,以及中长期发展前景展开讨论,以明确投资重点、跟踪方向。
来年,小组将聚焦陆军未来司令部明确的领域,优先重点是人工智能、机器人和自主技术,均由网络和数据提供支撑,包括其他领域。
小组正在研究用无人机或机器人技术帮助地面作战人员组织战区涉河巡逻。
未来与概念中心和第101空降师用户联合提出潜在研究开发技术清单。
小组正在推进一批综合某些功能的计划,探索让军队完全停止使用矿物燃料的方法。
另一个重点是开发网络欺骗能力,以加强对处理作战对手传感器数据AI算法的保护。
小组鼓励工业界参与,开展联合技术研发,促进联邦业务局与工业界组织技术研发合作,节省经费开支。
How ‘Team Ignite’ works to deliver concepts for the 2035 battlefield
WASHINGTON — Imagine a battlefield in which soldiers and equipment are hidden from satellites by living organisms that provide camouflage by filtering certain kinds of light. Or imagine concealing where soldiers have been by using organisms to build roads, with separate organisms that later eat away that pathway.
These ideas may seem like science fiction, but they are potential future capabilities under consideration by a relatively new program at the U.S. Army’s Combat Capabilities Development Command, called Team Ignite. The team, which has been operational for about a year, operates as a middleman between the the Army’s Futures and Concepts Center and the service’s operational community.
The Army began this effort because it wants technology that will give the war fighter a competitive edge on the battlefield of 2035.
Team Ignite hosts technology deep dives with Army employees across the future concepts community and operational community. According to Maj. Gen. John George, commanding general of the CCDC, the team has hosted 17 technological deep dives since its inception.
“Those ideas get embedded in the way that the functional concepts are written to help drive future priorities for the Army,” Jean Vettel, chief scientist for the Futures and Concepts Center at CCDC, said on an Oct. 14 call with reporters during the Association of the U.S. Army’s annual meeting.
During these deep dives, which include representatives from other military services, science and technology leaders discuss novel technologies and what the technological maturity of that capability is now, as well as what it will be in the medium and long term. They also discuss the state of technological development within the Army or industry.
“That gives us a better idea of where we’ve got to be investing in, or areas we’ve got to be following and then adopting as we go forward,” George told reporters.
In the upcoming year, Vettel said, Team Ignite will focus on areas dictated to them by the head of Army Futures Command, Gen. John Murray. The top priorities for the upcoming year are artificial intelligence, robotics and autonomy, which are all underpinned by the network and data, though the team is not limited to those areas.
The team is currently working on using drones or robots to get ground-based soldiers over rivers in a combat zone. Users from the Futures and Concepts Center and the 101st Airborne Division collaborated on a list of potential technologies and attributes that deserve more research and development.
“When you’re trying to get units over rivers or wet areas … it’s an extremely dangerous operation because you’re exposed,” said Col. Stephanie Ahern, director of concepts at the center.
Ahern added that there are ongoing projects that have incorporated some of the capabilities the team came up with. Vettel told reporters that the team is exploring ways to move the Army entirely off of using fossil fuels, a shift from previous efforts by the service that focused on just reducing fossil fuel consumption.
Another “hot topic” for Team Ignite, Vettel said, is network deception capabilities to protect artificial intelligence algorithms that process sensor data from adversaries.
George told reporters that Team Ignite is still working to involve industry, but he added that having businesses attend every Team Ignite event would be “overwhelming.” Though he did say cooperative research and development agreements, which allow federal agencies to work with industry on technology development without spending federal funds, is the best way for “one-on-one” collaboration.
“We ultimately want this Team Ignite to become the way we do business,” he added. “It’s increased collaboration with the right partners and the right events.”
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