Military

Unmanned F-16 demos combat mission capabilities alongside manned aircraft

The purpose of the Have Raider II demonstration was to test the ability of an unmanned F-16 to operate alongside manned fighters similar to these
Lockheed Martin
The purpose of the Have Raider II demonstration was to test the ability of an unmanned F-16 to operate alongside manned fighters similar to these
Lockheed Martin

It seems like unmanned combat aircraft are coming at us from two different directions. While some aerospace companies are building prototype combat drones, others are converting retired fighters to act as unmanned testbeds. Now Lockheed Martin Skunk Works, the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), the US Air Force Test Pilot School, and Calspan Corporation have collaborated to demonstrate how an autonomous F-16 can team up with manned aircraft during air-to-ground strike missions.

The first converted F-16s were produced by Boeing in 2013, and now Lockheed is using the surrogate Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle (UCAV) in aerial combat exercises to demonstrate how autonomous fighters can plan and execute air-to-ground strike missions. It was required to adapt to its mission priorities and what assets it has available, react to threats during an air-to-ground strike mission, deal with equipment malfunctions and communications failures, and rapidly accept new software components.

According to Lockheed, this was the second such demonstration. The first was Have Raider I, where an autonomous F-16 showed off its advanced vehicle controls, including the Lockheed Martin automatic collision avoidance systems, by flying in formation with a lead aircraft, carrying out a ground-attack mission, and then rejoining the leader.

The latest demonstration, Have Raider II, was conducted over a fortnight period at the Test Pilot School at Edwards Air Force Base, California. The purpose of the program is to develop autonomous control technologies that will allow the human pilots in a fighter formation to concentrate on complex executive decisions while leaving the unmanned aircraft to react to threats on their own.

"The Have Raider II demonstration team pushed the boundaries of autonomous technology and put a fully combat-capable F-16 in increasingly complex situations to test the system's ability to adapt to a rapidly changing operational environment," says Shawn Whitcomb, Lockheed Martin Skunk Works Loyal Wingman program manager. "This is a critical step to enabling future Loyal Wingman technology development and operational transition programs."

Source: Lockheed Martin

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2 comments
Aussie_2017
Can you imagine if US is using those sophisticated drones/unmanned aircrafts and someone is able to hack it, or hit it with EMP? With a pilot in, he/she still can try restart things, cut off the radio or all communications and go on with the mission (it will be dangerous though it can be done) or land. Those unmanned aircraft(s) or vehicle(s) can be turned against us if hacked (indeed it will). I think if the government can't keep hackers away we shouldn't even try this by now. Everybody agree that having a cyberwar can make a lot damages and this scenario is a very possible one.
JimFox
You would need to be deeply experienced in the design & implementation of software in such aircraft to comment reliably. Are they 'hardened' against hacking? I would think so. EMP is becoming like a conspiracy theory, popular with Dunning-Kruger victims. You are speaking of thermonuclear weaponry & if things get to that stage then it will matter nothing whether the aircraft is manned or autonomous! All human pilots would die anyway.