The Air Force has awarded a $40.8 million cost-sharing contract to Composite Engineering Inc., (CEI) for research and development of a disposable unmanned remotely piloted vehicle. The government’s share is $7.3 million and CEI’s share is $33.5 million. The Sacramento, Calif.,-based contractor will design, develop, assemble and test a technical baseline for a high-speed, long-range, low-cost, limited-life strike RPA, according to the contract announcement. The program, being directed by the Air Force Research Laboratory, also will identify key enabling technologies for future low-cost attainable aircraft demonstrations and provide a vehicle for future capability and technology demonstration, the award said. Work is expected to be completed by April 18, 2019. CEI builds advanced aerial targets and contributes to the Air Force’s Miniature Air Launched Decoys. The AFRL project is similar, but apparently unconnected, to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s ICARUS program, which seeks an unmanned aerial system that could deliver small amounts of supplies to remote areas and then disintegrate after unloading.
DARPA’s No. 2 Sees Quantum Sensing as Threat to Stealth
June 25, 2025
The stealth technology that gave the U.S. its airpower edge over the last 30 years is being overcome by new sensors that will make it hard for anything to hide, putting a premium again on speed and maneuverability, the deputy director of DARPA told AFA's Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies.