Enabling Battlespace Persistent Surveillance: The Form, Function, and Future of Smart Dust

Abstract

In 2025, the military's need for persistent surveillance applications will extend beyond current airborne platforms such as Global Hawk and Predator. The future of 2025 contains potential enemies with a material and information focus capable of conducting regular and irregular warfare on foreign lands as well as the continental United States. The U.S. military must invest its energy and money today into researching enabling technologies such as nanotechnology, wireless networks, and micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS). Nanotechnology reduces today's technology to the molecular level. Wireless networks can link people, computers, and sensors beyond the borders of nations without the need for costly hardware-intensive infrastructure. Finally, MEMS have the capability to act as independent or networked sensors. Fused together, these technologies can produce a network of nanosized particles -- Smart Dust -- that can be distributed over the battlefield to measure, collect, and disseminate information, Smart Dust will transform persistent surveillance for the warfighter. The U.S. military should lead the research and development of these enabling technologies so that Smart Dust will be a viable application by 2025.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Apr 01, 2007
Accession Number
ADA497553

Entities

People

  • Scott A. Dickson

Organizations

  • Air War College

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Advanced Electronics
  • Biomedical
  • Counter WMD
  • Cyber
  • Energy and Power Technologies
  • Ground and Sea Platforms
  • Sensors
  • Space

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Air Force
  • Aircrafts
  • Energy Consumption
  • Environmental Protection
  • Information Systems
  • Intelligence Collection
  • Law
  • Microelectromechanical Systems
  • Military Applications
  • Military Science
  • Mobile Phones
  • Nanotechnology
  • Reliability
  • Situational Awareness
  • Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
  • War Colleges
  • Warfare

Readers

  • Economics
  • Integrated Circuit Design and Technology.
  • Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) Autonomous Capabilities and Mission Reconnaissance.

Technology Areas

  • Biotechnology
  • Microelectronics
  • Microelectronics - Microelectromechanical Systems