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http://www.space.com/cgi-bin/email/gate.cgi?lk=T5&date=001005&go=/businesstechno
logy/technology/space_battlelabs_001004.html

Wargames Part 2: Supporting the Warfighter From Above

By Frank Sietzen, Jr.
Special to SPACE.com
posted: 07:02 am ET
04 October 2000

WASHINGTON, October 2 -- While leaders in the U.S. Air Force and U.S. Space
Command learn new lessons on the vulnerability of U.S. space assets, new space
battle laboratories, or "battlelabs," are working to help soldiers, sailors and
airmen on the ground.

"We're trying to measure the worth of new ideas and present the best to senior
Air Force leaders," said Lt. Col. Terry Sando, deputy commander of the Space
Battle Lab at Schriever Air Base in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Sando's group is
one of six Air Force battlelabs spread across the country looking at how space
assets can improve or enhance U.S. military operations.

The labs and other space warfare centers are each situated at military
installations. The researchers look into such areas as information superiority,
communications, reconnaissance, force protection, robot aircraft or other
aspects of the military's operational and technological needs. Some projects can
be discussed publicly, Sando said. And, of course, others are classified.

"There is no real limit as to what we can look into," said Sando. The labs have
about 24 staffers assigned to each with a budget of $4.5 million. They focus on
commercial space systems -- called 'commercial-off-the-shelf-technologies' or
COTS in defense-speak -- that can be readily adapted for the military's use.

Sando's space lab reports directly to Air Force Space Command, part of the
tri-service U.S. Space Command. Air and space superiority is the goal of the
21st-century Air Force.

What does that mean?

Controlling air and space -- who flies or orbits, what those craft do while
traversing the heavens.

During times of conflict it is "battlespace" that must be controlled -- the
ability of American forces to deny access to space by any enemy of the U.S. or
its allies.

That includes everyday communications moving through space: voice, e-mail,
paging signals, computer data and weather projections, as well as reconnaissance
images of enemy forces and basic military communications between forces, fleets
and command centers. Space is now a medium through which massive amounts of
ordinary data flows.

Even logistics and the planning of surface maneuvers requires "eyes" and "ears"
that overlook a future battlefield -- from high orbit. And that will someday
include the ability of the Air Force to attack rapidly anywhere in the world at
any time.

Such a projection of American power can be enhanced by space-based systems. The
battlelabs are culling the best of today's commercial products or new
inventions. "This is new technology that could change warfare, or have relevance
to the fighting force," said Sando.

But while the equipment might be available today, the applications have a
futuristic feel. One project, called SILC {Space Object identification in Living
Color) uses color optical lenses to identify different satellites in orbit.

"We know that different satellites give off different colors," Sando explained.
By aiming telescopes or optical lenses toward the path of the satellite,
military engineers can determine which they are -- and their purposes.

Another project is named STORC (Space Tracking of RV Convoys). Working with the
Department of Energy, military planners use the Global Positioning System (GPS)
to locate un-launched ballistic missiles.

As warheads for the U.S. missile fleet are moved from the field to storage
areas, GPS tracking receivers are mounted on the cases of the warhead, giving
the Air Force a digital "signature" of the warhead's precise location. "This is
near real-time," said Sando, meaning that the rocket stages and warheads can
always be monitored.

Project BRISC -- for Bomb Impact Assessment Reach-back Involving Space
Collectors -- doesn't use any new optics but instead sends back compressed
images and signals from missiles in flight in tiny micro-bursts to their
tracking and launch operators. The purpose? "It gives us a constant stream of
data on the missile's health, its location and I.D. as it heads into its
target," said Sando.

Other battlelab projects include space surveillance, environmental monitoring
and remote sensing. A major research effort involves the Air Force's desire for
what is termed "Space Control" -- literally determining who can access and use
space.

What is the nature of that research effort? "Sorry, that area is classified,"
Sando said.

The results of all these studies are rushed to the field for testing before
ultimately finding their place in the military's operations budget.

The Air Force is not alone in studying space warfare. The Army also has its
space battlelab. And while the Navy doesn't have one as yet, its Project TENCAP
(Tactical Exploitation of National Capabilities), along with the Navy Research
Lab and Center for Space Technology are looking toward space systems that can be
adapted for the Navy's unique needs.

The new emphasis on space is all part of a changing military, new strategies and
the evolution of war.

The U.S. military force in the early 21st century that takes advantage of the
nation's explosive technological advances to enhance its weapons systems will be
shaped by the contingencies of future wars.

=============================================
Robert F. Tatman
Adaptive Web Design and Consulting Services
*Building the Accessible Web for the 21st Century*
Jenkintown, PA, USA
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.tatmangroup.net

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