Here’s the DARPA Project It Says Could Pull the Navy a Decade Forward in Unmanned Technology

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A Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency artists' rendering of a ship designed to operate completely without human intervention (source: DARPA).
A Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency artists' rendering of a ship designed to operate completely without human intervention (source: DARPA).

May 29, 2020 | Originally published by c4isrnet.com on May 6, 2020

WASHINGTON – A project inside the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has the potential to pull the Navy’s unmanned surface vessel aspirations forward a decade, a senior DARPA official said Wednesday at the annual C4ISR Conference.

DARPA’s effort to develop a ship designed from the keel up to operate without humans, known as “NOMARS” for “no mariners,” is a separate effort from the Navy’s quest to develop a family of large and medium unmanned surface vessels. But the benefits of that program, if successful, could be a giant leap forward for the concept the Navy is developing, said Mike Leahy, who heads the Tactical Technology Office at DARPA.

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