- News
9 April 2014
DARPA's Mobile Hotspots phase 1 makes progress toward providing 1Gb/s backbone to remote troops
The US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) says that missions in remote, forward operating locations often suffer from a lack of connectivity to tactical operation centers and access to valuable intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) data. The assets needed for long-range, high-bandwidth communications capabilities are often unavailable to lower echelons due to theater-wide mission priorities.
DARPA’s Mobile Hotspots program aims to help overcome this challenge by developing a reliable, on-demand capability for establishing long-range, high-capacity reachback that is organic to tactical units. The program is building and demonstrating a scalable, mobile millimeter-wave communications backhaul network mounted on small unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and providing a 1Gb/s capacity. DARPA performers recently completed the first of three phases in which they developed and tested key technologies to be integrated into a complete system and flight tested in subsequent phases.
“We’re pleased with the technical achievements we’ve seen so far in steerable millimeter-wave antennas and millimeter-wave amplifier technology,” says program manager Dick Ridgway. “These successes - and the novel networking approaches needed to maintain these high-capacity links - are key to providing forward deployed units with the same high-capacity connectivity we all enjoy over our 4G cell-phone networks,” he adds.
Phase 1 accomplishments include:
- Smaller, steerable millimeter-wave antennas: During field testing, the program demonstrated steerable, compact millimeter-wave antennas that rapidly acquire, track and establish a communications link between moving platforms. Steerable millimeter-wave antennas will enable the formation of a high-capacity backhaul network between aerial and ground platforms.
- Low-noise amplifiers: Performers also demonstrated an advanced low-noise amplifier (LNA) that boosts the desired communications signal while minimizing unwanted noise. The prototype achieved the world’s lowest-noise millimeter-wave LNA, at about half the noise figure of a typical LNA.
- More efficient and capable power amplifiers: Efficient millimeter-wave amplification is required to achieve the long ranges (>50km) desired in the Mobile Hotspots program. During Phase 1, performers demonstrated output power exceeding 1 watt and 20% power-added efficiency (PAE) from a single gallium nitride (GaN) chip operating at E-band frequencies (71-86GHz). Output powers exceeding 20 watts and approaching 20% PAE were also achieved using power-combining techniques.
- New approaches for robust airborne networking: Mobile ad-hoc networking approaches were developed to maintain the high-capacity backhaul network among mobile air and ground platforms. Phase 1 performers developed unique solutions to overcome connectivity and network topology challenges associated with mobility and signal blockages due to terrain and platform shadowing.
- Low-size, weight and power (SWAP) pod design to carry it all: Performers created engineering designs for small, lightweight pods to be mounted on an RQ-7 Shadow UAV. The pods, with all of the Mobile Hotspots components inside, are designed to meet the challenging program goals of widths no more than 8 inches, weight less than 20 pounds, and power consumption less than 150 watts.
Phase 2 of the program began in March. Two performers - L-3 Communications and FIRST RF - were chosen to lead teams comprising several Phase 1 performers. Goals include integration of the selected Phase 1 technologies into Shadow-compatible aerial pods and ground vehicles. Phase 2 will conclude with a ground demonstration of at least four Shadow-compatible pods, two ground vehicles and a fixed ground node. A planned third phase will encompass field testing of the Mobile Hotspot systems on networks of multiple SRQ-7 Shadow UAVs and mobile ground vehicles.
www.darpa.mil/Our_Work/STO/Programs/Mobile_Hotspots.aspx