DARPA funds dozens of new urban-warfare tools
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The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has awarded 37 contracts for a variety of urban-warfighting technologies.
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency late last week awarded 37 contracts for new urban-warfighting technologies.
The agency last June had solicited proposals for casualty-reduction technologies; intelligence, reconnaissance and surveillance devices; beyond-line-of-sight weapons; urban command and control tools; and training and simulation systems.
The 37 awards, each worth from $130,000 to $2.7 million for six- to 12-month feasibility demonstrations, are intended to reduce casualties and collateral damage while improving effectiveness of smaller forces, DARPA said in a statement.
The awards went to:
- AETC Inc. of San Diego for sound detection devices
- Alphatech Inc. of Burlington, Mass., for 3-D situational perception devices
- Analysis Group of Falls Church, Va., for automated urban decision support
- Applied Research Associates Inc. of Raleigh, N.C., for aerial firefight sensors; optical navigation for operations not using the Global Positioning System; and detectors for concealed weapons and explosives
- Aptima Inc. of Woburn, Mass., for a culture-based urban modeling environment
- BAE Systems North America of Rockville, Md., for millimeter wave exposure to improve recognition; nonstop communications; an infrared situational awareness and threat warning system; and a rational observer system
- BBN Technologies Inc. of Cambridge, Mass., for force multipliers and persistent target tracking by 3-D radar
- BBNT Solutions LLC, also of Cambridge, for a cultural analysis and learning environment
- DEKA R&D of Manchester, N.H., for a rapid vertical mobility concept
- Draper Laboratory Inc., also of Cambridge, for radio frequency indoor geolocation and precision emplacement
- General Atomics of San Diego for Raptor View high-resolution surveillance
- Harris Corp. of Melbourne, Fla., for an urban communications environment
- ISX Corp. of Camarillo, Calif., for a culturally aware peacekeeping tool set
- Lockheed Martin Corp. for force multiplication and stabilization analysis models
- Metal Storm USA Ltd. of Arlington, Va., for urban weapons
- NextGen Aeronautics Inc. of Torrance, Calif., for small gunships
- Omnitech Robotics International of Englewood, Colo., for sensor emplacement methods
- PPG Industries Inc. of Allison Park, Pa., for nanostructured light-weight armor
- Raytheon Co. for active-protection and head-mounted alert systems
- Science Applications International Corp. of San Diego for smart-dust sensors, RF predictive propagation models, focused situational awareness and renewed-conflict models
- Sandia National Laboratories of Albuquerque, N.M., for air-dropped unmanned ground vehicles and multiplayer wargaming environments
- Smart Information Flow Technologies LLC of Minneapolis for cross-cultural training simulations
- SRI International of Menlo Park, Calif., for a wall-climbing robot
- University of Texas at Austin for low-cost radar sensors for personnel detection and tracking
- Wave Technologies of Chantilly, Va., for a rapid urban-warfare training environment.