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Russian Jamming Got You Down? Try Talking Underwater

Naif al Hilali

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Russian Jamming Got You Down? Try Talking Underwater

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David Axe
David Axe goes to war so you don't have to.
January 7, 2017

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DARPA Art


Russian Jamming Got You Down? Try Talking Underwater
DARPA is about to test a buoy-based comms network for warplanes
by DAVID AXE

Russia and China have been rapidly improving their ability to disrupt U.S. military communications during wartime. Now the U.S. Defense Department is waking up to the problem — and exploring new, harder-to-jam comms systems.

The latest might even be the most innovative so far. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is preparing to test a network of radio relays mounted on sea buoys and connected via hair-thin fiber-optic cable.

If the DARPA system works and the Pentagon chooses to acquire it, there could soon come a time when American warplanes swap data … via buoys bobbing on the ocean waves.


The jamming problem has been getting worse in recent years. Russian and Chinese forces have deployed increasingly powerful electronic warfare gear in the air, on the ground and at sea — all aimed at denying the radio frequency, or RF, to the U.S. military.

The Americans are uniquely vulnerable to RF jamming, as many U.S. war-fighting concepts rely on the ability of ground forces, aircraft and warships to exchange information via radio networks.

“We’ve just been assuming that the RF spectrum is a benign environment and nobody’s going to threaten us,” U.S. Air Force general John Hyten, then head of Air Force Space Command, said at an electronic warfare conference in late 2015.

“The rest of the world’s been watching that, too,” Hyten said, “China and Russia in particular.”

To help preserve radio networks in the most electronically-intensive combat, in mid-2014 DARPA launched the Tactical Undersea Network Architectures. “The concept involves deploying RF network node buoys — dropped from aircraft or ships, for example — that would be connected via thin underwater fiber-optic cables,” DARPA stated.

The U.S. government spent around $30 million on TUNA in 2015 and 2016.


TUNA could help U.S. forces to power through electronic interference. Radio signals lose power over distance, making them progressively more vulnerable to jamming. Two jet fighters flying a couple hundred of miles apart and trying to directly exchange data via, for example, a Link-16 network could be particularly susceptible to enemy jammers targeting the Link-16 signal.

But if the first fighter instead communicated with a TUNA buoy a mere 25 miles away and that buoy relayed the data via fiber-optic cable to a second buoy just 25 miles from the second plane, then the distance between emitter and receiver — for both fighters — would be much shorter. The network would be less vulnerable to jamming.

The agency wants a TUNA buoy network to last 30 days — long enough, it believes, for U.S. forces to establish more permanent data networks.


To work as designed, the buoys required two novel technologies. One, an ultra-thin but durable cable “able to withstand the pressure, saltwater and currents of the ocean,” according to John Kamp, DARPA’s TUNA program manager.

Second, DARPA needed some way to power the buoys. Heeding the agency’s call, the University of Washington’s Applied Physics Lab developed a kind of “generator buoy” that produces electricity from wave motion.

Now that the cable and generator buoy are both ready, DARPA announced in January 2017 that TUNA is ready for at-sea testing. U.S. forces are one step close to communicating through the water … and defeating enemy jamming.
 
I would like to add something here, if I may.

The ability to use SatCom instead of RF, already exists, and is used. Same concept as TUNA , instead replace TUNA with Satellites.

The point of TUNA is that in case SatCom is unavailable for any reason, TUNA can be used. Secondly, TUNA might offer better bandwidth, at a lower cost.
 
I would like to add something here, if I may.

The ability to use SatCom instead of RF, already exists, and is used. Same concept as TUNA , instead replace TUNA with Satellites.

The point of TUNA is that in case SatCom is unavailable for any reason, TUNA can be used. Secondly, TUNA might offer better bandwidth, at a lower cost.

Thank you sir.

You need never ask permission. I am always eagerly waiting for morsels of knowledge from you and the other professionals on this forum.
 
DARPA's sea network project completes first phase
By Ryan Maass | Jan. 6, 2017

WASHINGTON, Jan. 6 (UPI) -- The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's effort to develop backup power for naval forces reached its first milestone.

The project is known as the Tactical Undersea Network Architecture, or TUNA, and aims to provide technologies capable of restoring connectivity for deployed forces when traditional networks are unavailable. The program's first phase was marked by the development of concepts and technologies.

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DARPA researchers believe buoys can be used to generate electricity for U.S. military forces using the wave movement around them. Photo courtesy of the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency

"Phase 1 of the program included successful modeling, simulation, and at-sea tests of unique fiber-cable and buoy-component technologies needed to make such an undersea architecture work," program manager John Kamp said in a press release. "Teams were able to design strong, hair-thin, buoyant fiber-optic cables able to withstand the pressure, saltwater, and currents of the ocean, as well as develop novel power generation concepts."

According to DARPA, military personnel can temporarily restore network connectivity at sea by deploying radio frequency network node buoys from naval or air platforms. The buoys would be connected using thin underwater fiber-optic cables.

Researchers from the University of Washington's Applied Physics Lab developed a way the buoys may be able to generate electricity using the wave movement around them.

During the second and final phase of the TUNA program, DARPA researchers will seek to develop a prototype for testing. Trials will be conducted in laboratory settings and at sea using the Link 16 tactical data network.

http://www.upi.com/Business_News/Se...etes-first-phase/5471483710362/?spt=sec&or=bn
 
DARPA's sea network project completes first phase
By Ryan Maass | Jan. 6, 2017

WASHINGTON, Jan. 6 (UPI) -- The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's effort to develop backup power for naval forces reached its first milestone.

The project is known as the Tactical Undersea Network Architecture, or TUNA, and aims to provide technologies capable of restoring connectivity for deployed forces when traditional networks are unavailable. The program's first phase was marked by the development of concepts and technologies.

View attachment 367360
DARPA researchers believe buoys can be used to generate electricity for U.S. military forces using the wave movement around them. Photo courtesy of the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency

"Phase 1 of the program included successful modeling, simulation, and at-sea tests of unique fiber-cable and buoy-component technologies needed to make such an undersea architecture work," program manager John Kamp said in a press release. "Teams were able to design strong, hair-thin, buoyant fiber-optic cables able to withstand the pressure, saltwater, and currents of the ocean, as well as develop novel power generation concepts."

According to DARPA, military personnel can temporarily restore network connectivity at sea by deploying radio frequency network node buoys from naval or air platforms. The buoys would be connected using thin underwater fiber-optic cables.

Researchers from the University of Washington's Applied Physics Lab developed a way the buoys may be able to generate electricity using the wave movement around them.

During the second and final phase of the TUNA program, DARPA researchers will seek to develop a prototype for testing. Trials will be conducted in laboratory settings and at sea using the Link 16 tactical data network.

http://www.upi.com/Business_News/Se...etes-first-phase/5471483710362/?spt=sec&or=bn

will this be a backup program to communicate in case RF jamming ?? (pardon me for my silly question as i'm not much aware about this concept)
 

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