Drone Surveillance System to be
Tested on Canadian Coast Guard Vessels
Kongsberg Geospatial announced that it has been
selected by Defence Research and Development Canada (DRDC) to conduct trials of
a new long-endurance UAV surveillance system for the Canadian Coast Guard. The
MartinUAV V-BAT aircraft was selected to provide the unique ability to combine
take off and landing from the small confines aboard ship with the long
endurance of a fixed-wing aircraft while carrying multiple sensors.
The aircraft will communicate with the
Kongsberg Geospatial sensor data management system, called MIDAS, which allows
a range of sensor data, including full-motion video from unmanned systems to be
processed and exploited in near real-time by analysts on board Canadian Coast
Guard ships. MIDAS provides the capability to compare historical and live data
from the mission area, and to examine sensor data with a variety of tools,
including motion and object detection, in near-real time. This near real-time
analytical capability can greatly enhance the effectiveness of UAVs for a
variety of mission types.
The V-BAT Unmanned Aerial System (UAS)
provided by Martin UAV is a fixed-wing vertical take-off and landing (VTOL)
aircraft specifically designed to operate from very small spaces on ships,
land, and nearly any environment. The V-BAT is a long-endurance aircraft
capable of carrying multiple sensors, including land and maritime wide area
surveillance.
Kongsberg Geospatial’s MIDAS is derived
from technologies created for the NATO Alliance Ground Surveillance project
which required the storage and retrieval of vast amounts of intelligence data
for Intelligence Analysts. The system directly addresses the problem that the
vast majority of UAVs have no standards-compliant capability to process,
exploit, and distribute (PED) their sensor data where it is being used. MIDAS
provides a fully standards-compliant system that allows intelligence analysts
to view, process, and analyze sensor data in near real-time, from where the
drone is being operated. MIDAS has packaged these capabilities into a tactical
and portable form factor to enables those surveillance capabilities to be
deployed as a portable system on board a ship, or in a temporary command post.
CINTIQS Military Technology Consulting
will be providing consulting services for the planning and conduct of the
flight trials and sensor employment to validate systems performance.
The combination of the Martin UAV V-BAT
and the Kongsberg MIDAS sensor data management system will allow Coast Guard
vessels to significantly expand their surveillance range for search and rescue
missions, and for the surveillance of the movement of icebergs, without
requiring the use of manned aircraft.
“UAVs are a useful tool, but they only
truly effective if they can collect sensor data that results in actionable
intelligence,” said Ranald McGillis, President of Kongsberg Geospatial. “Our
MIDAS system allows users to fully exploit raw sensor data, and derive useful
intelligence at the tactical edge where the UAV is being used. In a search and
rescue context, that could mean using infrared sensors, or near real-time
motion detection to locate a subject when visibility or weather conditions are
poor.”
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