Gulf Today

US looks to exoskeleto­ns to build ‘super-soldiers’

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WASHINGTON: The US Army is investing millions of dollars in experiment­al exoskeleto­n technology to make soldiers stronger and more resilient, in what experts say is part of a broader push into advanced gear to equip a new generation of “super-soldiers.”

The technology is being developed by Lockheed Martin Corp with a licence From canada-based b-temia, WHICH irst developed the exoskeleto­ns to help people with mobility difficulti­es stemming From medical ailments like multiple sclerosis and severe osteoarthr­itis.

Worn over a pair of pants, the batteryope­rated exoskeleto­n uses a suite of sensors, artificial intelligen­ce AND other technology to aid natural movements.

For the US military, the appeal of such technology is clear: Soldiers now deploy into war zones bogged down by heavy but critical gear like body armour, night-vision goggles and advanced radios. Altogether, that can weigh anywhere from 40 to 64 kg, when the recommende­d limit is just 23 kg.

“That means when people do show up to THE ight, they’re FATIGUED,” SAID Paul Scharre at the Centre for a New American Security, who helped lead a series of studies on exoskeleto­ns and other advanced gear. “The fundamenta­l challenge we’re facing with infantry troops is they’re carrying too much weight.”

Lockheed Martin said on Thursday it won a $6.9 million award from the US Army Natick Soldier Research, Developmen­t and Engineerin­g Center to research and develop the exoskeleto­n, called ONYX, under a two-year, solesource agreement.

Keith Maxwell, the exoskeleto­n technologi­es manager at Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control, said people in his company’s trials who wore the exoskeleto­ns showed far more endurance.

“You GET to THE ight FRESH. You’re not worn out,” Maxwell said.

Maxwell, who demonstrat­ed a prototype, said each exoskelelt­on was expected to cost in the tens of thousands of dollars.

B-TEMIA’S medically focused system, called Keeogo, is sold in Canada for about C$39,000 ($30,000), company spokeswoma­n Pamela Borges said.

The United States is not the only country looking at exoskeleto­n technology.

Samuel Bendett at the Center for Naval Analyses (CNAS), a federally funded US research and developmen­t centre, said Russia and China were also investing in exoskeleto­n technologi­es, “in parallel” to the US advances.

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