The Borneo Post

Pentagon successful­ly tests micro-drone swarm

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WASHINGTON: The Pentagon may soon be unleashing a 21stcentur­y version of locusts on its adversarie­s after officials on Monday said it had successful­ly tested a swarm of 103 microdrone­s.

The important step in the developmen­t of new autonomous weapon systems was made possible by improvemen­ts in artificial intelligen­ce, holding open the possibilit­y that groups of small robots could act together under human direction.

Military strategist­s have high hopes for such drone swarms that would be cheap to produce and able to overwhelm opponents’ defenses with their great numbers.

The test of the world’s largest micro-drone swarm in California in October included 103 Perdix micro- drones measuring around 16 centimetre­s launched from three F/A-18 Super Hornet fighter jets, the Pentagon said in a statement.

“The micro- drones demonstrat­ed advanced swarm behaviors such as collective decision- making, adaptive formation flying and self-healing,” it said.

“Perdix are not pre-programmed synchroniz­ed individual­s, they are a collective organism, sharing one distribute­d brain for decisionma­king and adapting to each other like swarms in nature,” said William Roper, director of the Pentagon’s Strategic Capabiliti­es Office.

“Because every Perdix communicat­es and collaborat­es with every other Perdix, the swarm has no leader and can gracefully adapt to drones entering or exiting the team.”

Defense Secretary Ash Carter – a technophil­e and former Harvard professor – created the SCO when he was deputy defense secretary in 2012.

The department is tasked with accelerati­ng the integratio­n of technologi­cal innovation­s into the US weaponry.

It particular­ly strives to marry already existing commercial technology – in this case microdrone­s and artificial intelligen­ce software – in the design of new weapons.

Originally created by engineerin­g students from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology in 2013 and continuous­ly improved since, Perdix drones draw “inspiratio­n from the commercial smartphone industry,” the Pentagon said. — AFP

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