Sikorsky Successfully Completes DARPA ALIAS Phase 1 Competition
with Autonomous Flight
STRATFORD, Conn., May 31, 2016 /PRNewswire/ -- Sikorsky, a Lockheed Martin
(NYSE: LMT) Company, has successfully demonstrated a 30-mile autonomous flight
using a Sikorsky S-76® commercial helicopter to complete Phase 1 of an $8
million award from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)'s
Aircrew Labor In-Cockpit Automation System (ALIAS) program.
Sikorsky's ALIAS system directed the rotorcraft flight demonstration from
Sikorsky's Stratford, Connecticut, facility to Robertson Airport in Plainville,
Connecticut, utilizing autonomous technology capabilities.
This flight highlighted the ability for an operator to plan and execute
every phase of an autonomous mission with a tablet device. During the
demonstration, a ground station crew located at the flight initiation field
monitored the progress of the ALIAS-enabled Sikorsky Autonomy Research Aircraft
(SARA), an S-76® commercial helicopter. A video of the demonstration is
available online at: tinyurl.com/zo2qc98
The objective of DARPA's ALIAS program is to develop and insert new levels
of automation into existing military and commercial aircraft to enable those
aircraft to operate with reduced onboard crew. ALIAS seeks to leverage advances
in autonomy that reduce pilot workload, augment mission performance, and improve
aircraft safety and reliability.
Sikorsky utilized its Matrix Technology™ introduced in 2013 to develop,
test and field hardware and software systems that significantly improve
optionally piloted and piloted vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) aircraft.
Sikorsky has installed MATRIX on both SARA and a BLACK HAWK
helicopter.
"With the advances we've made, the capability for safe, unobtrusive
optionally piloted flight is here," said Mark Miller, Vice President of
Engineering & Technology at Sikorsky. "ALIAS is expanding the role of
optionally piloted helicopters for early entry into established aircraft
programs. It has the capability of not only reducing aircrew size, but also
changing the type and length of training required for safe operation."
With work on ALIAS Phase 1 complete, Sikorsky has begun Phase 2 of the
program. DARPA awarded Sikorsky a $9.8 million modification for the
competition's second phase, which focuses on continued maturation of the initial
ALIAS system with additional flight tests, enhancements to the human interface
and transition to additional aircraft to demonstrate ALIAS
portability.
"The current environment limits the creation of new, optionally piloted
platforms. What Sikorsky and DARPA are demonstrating is the successful and
affordable integration of advanced technology onto existing legacy aircraft to
not only set the stage for autonomous operations down the road, but also to
immediately improve aircraft performance, reduce maintenance costs, and increase
crew and passenger safety," said Chris Van Buiten, Vice President of Sikorsky
Innovations, the technology research group for the Engineering & Technology
organization.
"We are delighted to be working with DARPA on this transformational
program," Van Buiten added.
About Lockheed Martin: Headquartered in Bethesda, Maryland, Lockheed Martin
is a global security and aerospace company that employs approximately 125,000
people worldwide and is principally engaged in the research, design,
development, manufacture, integration and sustainment of advanced technology
systems, products and services.
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