Lockheed team to develop surveillance radar
Lockheed Martin Corp. has won a prime contract from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to design, build and flight test a model of a high-altitude, autonomous airship featuring advanced radar for theaterwide surveillance and tracking.
Lockheed Martin Corp. has won a $400 million prime contract from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to design, build and flight test a model of a high-altitude, autonomous airship featuring advanced radar that would provide theaterwide surveillance and tracking capabilities.
The work is for Phase 3 of DARPA’s Integrated Sensor Is Structure (ISIS) program, agency and company officials announced April 27. The program’s goal is to develop the core technologies necessary to demonstrate a radar-sensor package operating at stratospheric altitudes.
Under the contract, Lockheed Martin will provide systems integration services, and Raytheon Co. will furnish a high-energy, low-power density radar, Lockheed Martin officials said.
The goal of the ISIS program is provide radar capable of delivering persistent, wide-area surveillance tracking and engagement of air targets within a 600-kilometer area and ground targets within a 300-mile area, according to DARPA.
Raytheon’s active electronically scanned array antenna will transmit on ultra high frequency and X-band from an autonomous airship operating at 70,000 feet. When the airship is eventually fielded, it would scan for targets and communicate directly with battlefield forces from a single antenna for up to 10 years, Raytheon officials said.
Lockheed Martin, of Bethesda, Md., ranks No. 1 on Washington Technology’s 2008 Top 100 list of the largest federal government prime contractors.
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