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Airborne, Maritime and Fixed Stations (AMF)
Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS)
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The Airborne, Maritime and Fixed Stations (AMF) JTRS program will deliver a suite
of software defined, multi-function radios for use throughout the
Department of Defense, as well as potential use in the Department of
Homeland Security. A single radio will be capable of operating on
highly secure, high performance military tactical networks in
net-centric operations. AMF JTRS radios will interoperate with
legacy data and voice circuits used by the U.S., allied or NATO
military forces, as well as communicate with civilian
first-responder voice and data systems used in disaster relief and
other national emergencies.
The Lockheed Martin AMF/JTRS
team is currently under contract for the Pre-System Development and
Demonstration (Pre-SDD) phase of the AMF JTRS competition. The AMF
JTRS program is expected to be awarded in February 2007. The
Lockheed Martin team includes BAE SYSTEMS, General Dynamics,
Raytheon and Northrop Grumman.
In September 2006 Lockheed Martin completed a series of flight
demonstrations of the AMF component of the US military's JTRS. The
tests consisted of eight consecutive dynamic segments, which
demonstrated the ability to seamlessly integrate the waveforms into
an interoperable network. The network will be able to support shared
situational awareness information, enable interoperability between
platforms out of line-of-sight, share streaming video and maintain
wideband network quality of service.
The test involved various airborne platforms, including a
helicopter, F-16 and simulated UAV which transmitted data and video
in real-time using both new and legacy systems. The demonstration
highlighted the ability to use the future systems utilizing elements
of the Wideband Networking Waveform (WNW) and Solider Radio Waveform
(SRW) and effectively integrate them with legacy aircraft equipped
with Link-16 communications. Such integration yields "enhanced
theater applications like the Theater Battle Management Core System,
Distributed Common Ground System and Joint Tactical Observation
systems" said John Mengucci, vice president and General Manager of
DoD Systems for Lockheed Martin Integrated Systems & Solutions.
During the recent demonstration, ground and aerial nodes interfaced
in a dynamic joint tactical Mobile Ad hoc Network using an enhanced
version of the Ground Mobile Radio (GMR), WNW, SRW and Legacy
Link-16 communications. Receiving sites were networked directly into
the mission network through the government's Defense Research and
Engineering Network.
"We ported WNW and SRW on prototype Software Defined Radios to
support dynamic routing, streaming video and cross-banding utilizing
both IPv4 and IPv6" Said Lockheed Martin's AMF JTRS Program Director
Glenn Kurowski. |
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