Viability of Medium-Sized Unmanned Surface Vehicles to Protect Surface Action Groups Against Anti-Ship Cruise Missiles
Abstract
This report describes equipping medium-sized unmanned surface vehicles and integrating them with surface action groups to improve defense against anti-ship cruise missile threats. Requirements for air search radar, electronic warfare, soft-kill deception countermeasure, surface-to-air missile, and close-in weapons systems are generated and allocated to physical components. Requirements for supporting subsystems, such as an integrated combat system and communications, electrical power, cooling, hydraulics, positioning, navigation, and timing systems, are also identified. The unmanned surface vehicles ability to extend sensor and weapons coverage for the surface action group is explored via modeling and simulation. The report presents quantitative analysis that employing unmanned surface vehicles equipped with systems to detect anti-ship cruise missile threats and soft-kill and hard-kill threat response options offers surface action groups a defensive advantage against those threats.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Jun 01, 2019
- Accession Number
- AD1080173
Entities
People
- Alex J. Clark
- Darren B. Robertson
- Joel M. Hammen
- Jonathan P. Logan
- Kimberly T. Pullen
- Layna Nelson
- Nathaniel E. Deascentis
Organizations
- Naval Postgraduate School