By Warren Duffie Jr.
Office of Naval Research
MARINE CORPS BASE QUANTICO, Va., Dec. 14, 2017 — Cutting edge technology sponsored by the Office of Naval Research may one day enable the Marine Corps to resupply combat-deployed troops via unmanned aerial vehicles, officials announced.
A
 successful final helicopter flight demonstration was achieved here Dec.
 12 with autonomous capability as part of the Autonomous Aerial 
Cargo/Utility System program. AACUS is a partnership between ONR and 
technology company Aurora Flight Sciences.
Sensor, Software Package
The
 system consists of a sensor and software package that can be integrated
 into any manned or unmanned rotary-wing aircraft to detect and avoid 
obstacles -- like telephone wires, other vehicles or large ground 
objects -- in unfavorable weather conditions or to facilitate 
autonomous, unmanned flight. This capability will be a welcome 
alternative to dangerous convoys or manned aircraft missions in all 
types of weather.
“This
 is more than just an unmanned helicopter,” said Walter Jones, ONR 
executive director. “AACUS is an autonomy kit that can be placed on any 
rotary-wing platform and provide it with an autonomous capability. 
Imagine a Marine Corps unit deployed in a remote location, in rough 
terrain, needing ammunition, water, batteries or even blood.”
Jones
 added, “With AACUS, an unmanned helicopter takes the supplies from the 
base, picks out the optimal route and best landing site closest to the 
warfighters, lands, and returns to base once the resupply is complete --
 all with the single touch of a hand-held tablet.” 
The
 need for this capability surfaced during Marine Corps operations in 
Afghanistan and Iraq, officials said. Cargo helicopters and resupply 
convoys of trucks bringing fuel, food, water, ammunition and medical 
supplies to the front lines frequently found themselves under enemy fire
  -- or the target of roadside bombs and other improvised explosive 
devices.
Easy to Use
AACUS
 is designed for simple use. An operator with minimal training can call 
up the supplies needed and order the flights using only an intuitive 
handheld tablet. During the Dec. 12 demonstration tests at Quantico, a 
Marine with no prior experience with the technology was given a handheld
 device and 15 minutes of training.
The
 Marine was able to quickly and easily program in the supplies needed 
and the destination, and the helicopters arrived quickly -- even 
autonomously selecting an alternative landing site based on last-second 
no-fly-zone information added in from the Marine. The demonstration 
featured a UH-1 Huey helicopter flying autonomously on multiple 
missions.
“We’ve
 developed this great capability ahead of requirements and it’s up to us
 to determine how to use it,” said Lt. Gen. Robert Walsh, commanding 
general, Marine Corps Combat Development Command. “The young Marines 
today have grown up in a tech-savvy society, which is an advantage. 
We’ve got to keep pushing and moving this technology forward.”
Officials
 say AACUS represents a leap-ahead technology for the Marine Corps and 
Navy, moving unmanned flights far beyond the current standard, which 
requires a specialized operator to select a landing site and manually 
control an unmanned aircraft via remote.
 

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