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DARPA develops collaborative autonomy for UAVs

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DARPA CODE program
DARPAโ€™s CODE program is planning to extend the capability of the U.S. militaryโ€™s existing UAS to conduct dynamic long-distance engagements in contested or denied battlespaces

US: DARPAโ€™s Collaborative Operations in Denied Environment (CODE)ย  program aims to extend the capability of the U.S. militaryโ€™s existing unmanned aircraft systems (UASs) to conduct dynamic, long-distance engagements of highly mobile ground and maritime targets in contested or denied battlespaces. Multiple CODE-equipped unmanned aircraft would navigate to their destinations and find, track, identify, and engage targets under established rules of engagementโ€”all under the supervision of a single human mission commander.

DARPA has selected the Raytheon Company (Tucson, Ariz.) to complete the development of the CODE software during Phase 3. Once fully demonstrated, CODEโ€™s scalable capabilities could greatly enhance the survivability, flexibility, and effectiveness of existing air platforms, as well as reduce the development times and costs of future systems.

โ€œCODE is working to develop a low-cost approach to upgrade legacy unmanned aircraft and make them more effective through groundbreaking algorithms and software that enable them to work together with minimal supervision,โ€ said ย Jean-Charles Ledรฉ, DARPA program manager for CODE and acting deputy director of the Agencyโ€™s Tactical Technology Office (TTO).

To date, the program has conducted Phase 2 flight test series with teams led by Lockheed Martin Corporation (Orlando, Fla.) and Raytheon validating the software open architecture and test-support framework. The teams completed numerous flight tests at Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake in California. The tests flew RQ-23 Tigershark UASs modified with CODE hardware and software to control flight direction, altitude, speed, and sensors.

โ€œThe Phase 2 test flights exceeded their objectives to stand up the infrastructure, and showed promising progress toward the future collaborative autonomy capabilities CODE envisions,โ€ Ledรฉ said. โ€œIn Phase 3, we anticipate further expanding CODE capabilities by testing greater numbers of aircraft and highly autonomous behaviors in more complex scenarios.โ€