U.S.
Military Training Nears Leap In Simulation Capability
Steve Trimble August
01, 2023
Air Force artwork shows a simulator cell in the Joint Simulation
Environment.
Credit: U.S. Air Force
At some
point in August, operational testers will at last be able to put a Block
3F-equipped Lockheed Martin F-35 through a final gauntlet of the most complex
air combat trials ever conceived for a modern fighter.
The Joint
Simulation Environment (JSE), originally scheduled for 2017, is expected to
host a series of 64 required test trials to complete the Initial Operational
Test and Evaluation (IOT&E) phase, a mandatory step in the Pentagon’s
acquisition process to clear a program to enter full-rate production.
·
Opens door to a long-promised breakthrough in
future air combat training
·
Pentagon plans to make the environment a new
standard in operational training
In the case
of the F-35, the exercise might seem academic. Although technically still
participating in an extended, five-year IOT&E phase, Lockheed Martin has
delivered about 950 F-35s to 14 U.S. and international operators, 12 of which
have declared the aircraft fit for combat.
But the
long-delayed JSE-hosted test series will stress a soon-to-be-obsolete version
of the F-35’s mission systems in a way that is impossible to replicate in
open-air trials on test and training series.
The events
also will open the door to a long-promised breakthrough in future air combat
training beyond the operational test community, linking live and synthetic
aircraft in real time to simulate scenarios with complexity, ranges and numbers
that would be impossible within the limitations of open-air ranges.
At the same
time, the factors that drove a six-year delay to begin IOT&E testing in the
Defense Department’s JSE facilities also point to future challenges. To realize
the JSE to its full potential for operational training, U.S. defense officials
must address a gap between the need to integrate the software-based models of
weapon systems developed by several companies and the way the defense industry
traditionally views intellectual property ownership of those same digital
models.
For example,
the Block 3F software set for IOT&E testing is being replaced with early
versions of Block 4 software in operational jets, with a Technology Refresh-4
hardware package scheduled to enter service next year that will enable further
Block 4 software releases. But the Pentagon is still negotiating the software
licenses needed to obtain the rights to integrate the digital model of Block
4-equipped F-35 capabilities into the JSE.
The ongoing
talks pose no obstacle to starting IOT&E testing on Block 3F software but
are a roadblock to elevating the JSE as a tool for operational training instead
of only operational testing.
“There are
no software licensing issues impacting the configuration of JSE supporting
IOT&E runs for score” as those tests will count toward the F-35’s “score”
for passing IOT&E, a spokesperson for the F-35 Joint Program Office (JPO)
tells Aviation Week. “We are working with our industry partners on software
rights and licensing for future configurations of the JSE. While negotiations
are ongoing, we cannot comment any further.”
The U.S. Air Force will use a simulated environment designed to test the F-35’s capabilities for routine operational testing. Credit: U.S. Air Force
Disputes
over intellectual property rights and software licensing contributed to the
delays in preparing the JSE for the IOT&E F-35 test trials.
To run the
trials, the JSE requires access to a high-fidelity simulation of the aircraft
and its mission systems, which the program calls the “F-35 in a Box” (FIAB).
This system replicates the exact software used by the F-35’s radar, electronic
warfare system, imagery sensors and communications, navigation and
identification system. The FIAB runs the mission systems and aerodynamic data
from a real F-35 integrated core processor, which includes the sensor fusion
algorithms the aircraft uses to identify targets that would not be detected by
a single sensor.
As the
dispute developed in 2017, Lockheed officials said certain portions of the FIAB
software were developed exclusively at the company’s expense and could not be
used by the military unless it paid licensing fees. The JPO argued that the
government had fully funded the F-35’s software development, and the military
should not pay twice for access to the FIAB.
In the end,
the JPO and Lockheed settled the dispute and agreed to a licensing scheme to
support the IOT&E tests. But operational testers found several major
deficiencies in the FIAB software, which has taken a few years to resolve.
Program officials still expect to complete all 64 tests—representing 42% of all
mission scenarios evaluated during IOT&E—by the end of the fiscal year in
September. However, Nickolas Guertin, the director for operational test and
evaluation (DOTE), says the final report may not be ready until 90 days after
the JSE trials have been completed.
A JSE
facility at NAS Patuxent River—one of four such test and training centers
opened or under construction by the Navy and Air Force— is scheduled to begin
the simulated IOT&E tests in August. The trials include 11 defensive
counter-air scenarios, 22 cruise missile defense events and 31 combined
offensive counter-air/air interdiction/destruction of enemy air defense tests.
All of the scenarios are being staged in a simulated environment that presents
a density and complexity of defenses over a geographic area that is not
possible in open-air ranges, according to the DOTE’s latest annual report.
The next
step is to apply the resources of the JSE facilities to operational training
with the F-35 and other aircraft. Last March, Gen. Charles Q. Brown, Jr., the
Air Force’s chief of staff, directed that all “relevant legacy aircraft” and
future aircraft programs make themselves compatible for training in the JSE.
The new simulation architecture will allow pilots flying aircraft in the real world to interact with pilots in simulators in real-time during training missions. Credit: U.S. Navy
Accordingly,
the 412th Test Wing at Edwards AFB, California, formally opened a JSE facility,
allowing companies to install four simulators each for the F-35 and Lockheed
Martin F-22. The facility includes two additional bays for future programs,
with the Northrop Grumman B-21 soon to enter flight testing and the
Next-Generation Air Dominance program on track to enter development next year.
Another JSE facility is being built at Nellis AFB, Nevada.
Finally, the
Air Force announced plans in March to build the Joint Integrated Test and
Training Center (JITTC) at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska. When the
facility opens in 2027, the JITTC should offer the first facility for Air
Force, Navy and international pilots to fly integrated live and simulated
missions together. The goal is to directly link live aircraft tracking data
over the sprawling Joint Pacific-Alaska Range Complex with simulators inside
the JITTC.
However, the
intellectual property issues between government and industry must be resolved
first. Questions over data rights for such a comprehensive and realistic
simulation environment have lingered for years.
Any
negotiations may need to go beyond licenses between aircraft prime contractors
and the government. The simulators in the JSE and the JITTC will need accurate
and up-to-date digital models of the aircraft, weapons and sensors. That
requires the Air Force to obtain a license to use the intellectual property of
the digital design for the aircraft and a missile. In addition, the digital
model from the aircraft manufacturer has to be compatible with software for the
model of the weapon, or vice versa.
A possible
solution is emerging with the Air Force’s Simulator Common Architecture
Requirements and Standards (SCARS) program, which is creating a government
reference architecture. Ideally, the interfaces defined by the architecture
will allow suppliers to create compatible digital models. The architecture is
expected to be released with the Increment 3 version of SCARS this year or in
2024.
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