back to article DARPA looks for a guided bullet with DEAD reckoning navigation

Madcap Pentagon tech shop DARPA is looking again at the Global Positioning System (GPS, which makes almost all the world's satnav systems work) in a bid to reinvent the tech which used to be cutting edge military gear but these days is tracking dogs and finding golf balls. DARPA's director Arati Prabhakar has announced that …

COMMENTS

This topic is closed for new posts.
  1. Aitor 1

    Inertial? no way

    You can't a fully inertial system.

    The problem is the inicial shoock of the shot will provide way more Gs than current sensors can detect/withstand: so you don't know your speed.

    Therefore, you need a laser guidance system so you know where you are. Maybe an hybrid system could be made, with a reduced powder bullet and gyrojet hybrid, laser riding at first and then inertial navigation.

    I could see it inside a .50 BMG.. but a 5.56? no way! Maybe an automatic shotgun would be a better option: high caliber, low pressure, slow bullet (but as it is guided, no problem with that).

    Still, it would be WAY better to have that for a grenade launcher.

    1. Uncle Slacky Silver badge
      FAIL

      Re: Inertial? no way

      You can use MEMS inertial sensors, which can withstand huge accelerations (>20,000 g) - I used to work on them.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Inertial? no way -"Still, it would be WAY better to have that for a grenade launcher."

      No, it would not.

      Quaker here, and quite angry. The US has flooded its own country, South America, and the Middle East with cheap weapons and the results are all too obvious.

      The relentless drive of the US to make weapons smaller and cheaper destabilises the whole world, and it needs to stop. Now.

      Far more people in history have been killed with small, cheap weapons that with large, complex ones. If you must develop these things, make it so only governments can afford them.

      1. Psyx
        FAIL

        Re: Inertial? no way -"Still, it would be WAY better to have that for a grenade launcher."

        "Far more people in history have been killed with small, cheap weapons that with large, complex ones. If you must develop these things, make it so only governments can afford them."

        You mean like AK-47s and RPG-7s?

        Don't lay the blame at cheap weapons solely on America's doorstep when plenty of other people are selling even cheaper ones. Most of the weapons being used in worldwide conflicts today have never been near CONUS.

        1. John 73

          Re: Inertial? no way -"Still, it would be WAY better to have that for a grenade launcher."

          You have rather missed ribosome's point, it appears.

      2. Phil O'Sophical Silver badge

        Re: Inertial? no way -"Still, it would be WAY better to have that for a grenade launcher."

        > If you must develop these things, make it so only governments can afford them.

        Nice idea in theory, but the reality of modern technology is that anything a government can afford today will probably be feasible in a well-equipped garage in 10 years time. At least by having the big guns (pun intended) research & make these things there's some chance that they'll be able to keep such measures (and countermeasures) ahead of the amateurs.

      3. Trokair 1
        Thumb Down

        Re: Inertial? no way -"Still, it would be WAY better to have that for a grenade launcher."

        @ribosome

        Really? I guess the ENTIRE COUNTRY also loads the ammo and fires it at childern too correct? Get over yourself. Bad people do bad things. They will use anything. Guns, knives, bombs, cars, airliners, you name it. But it is much easier to blame one country for all of the world's problems right? Sod off.

        1. Rampant Spaniel

          Only governments? Like Syria perhaps? Or Iraq or Afghanistan. Or maybe you mean only large countries like China or Russia, as they never shot anyone they couldn't drive a tank over.

          I do share some of your thoughts, if we shifted the energies we put into creating weapons into drugs research, space exploration, hell anything! We would probably have a nicer world, at least for as long as it took for one nutjob to realise anybody with an ak, some gardening gloves and a decent warface could rule the world. It's a nice thought, but unfortunately probably impractical.

      4. Anomalous Cowshed

        Re: Inertial? no way -"Still, it would be WAY better to have that for a grenade launcher."

        "Far more people in history have been killed with small, cheap weapons that with large, complex ones. If you must develop these things, make it so only governments can afford them."

        If you "must develop these things"? Wow. And why would you want to let 'governments' have a monopoly on weapons? Do you think that it will make our lives better and lead to fewer people getting killed?

      5. Turtle

        @ribosome

        "Quaker here, and quite angry. The US has flooded its own country, South America, and the Middle East with cheap weapons and the results are all too obvious."

        Well, ignorant moralizing is actually the essence of Quakerism, is it not? (It's actually a rhetorical question; I am just curious to see if you will admit it or not.)

      6. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Inertial? no way -"Still, it would be WAY better to have that for a grenade launcher."

        yea, it SUCKS that we allow people who are not powerful and wealthy the means to defend themselves against the rich. Why with weapons being only the providence of the rich and powerful, we will have peace-peace because everyone is crushed under the heel of whomever has the most cash. don't want uppity peasants having power-parity now do we?

        Suppression of conflict through overwhelming force is not a "peace" I want any part of.

      7. JLV

        @ Angry Quaker

        Hmmm, not sure if I agree or disagree.

        First, fully with you that there are way too many cheap guns being used to kill & terrorize years after the wars are over.

        But the US military industrial complex is hardly known for bargain weaponry, quite the opposite. And many of the small arms you rightly criticize are more the AK-47s, not least because they require less maintenance.

        On the other hand the US dominates weapon exports (not for lack of other countries trying to peddle their wares, mind you).

        A worthy goal for DARPA? :

        How about developing weapons with a built-in life "clock"? For example, nano-coat a rifle barrel so that it works fine, for say 5 years? Then it gradually degrades and stop working. Or Stinger equivalents whose electronics die after that time as well? (the US had to run an expensive program recovering those from Afghanistan in the 90s). Ditto for gradually degrading explosives that would become inert.

        Third world countries facing a military emergency could receive aid, but the weapons would not survive the war by much. This could be used to arm the least worse faction in Congo, for example.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: @ Angry Quaker

          That would actually be a cool idea. It would also give some indication as to WHEN someone (country) plans to use the weapons (less than 5 years, right?). Thus allowing us to all move house or whatever.

          Unfortunately, the market would probably just get flooded with cheap "non-self-destruct" weapons and people would then merrily continue killing each other, probably with a combination of smart and stupid weapons.

          1. Psyx
            Pint

            Re: @ Angry Quaker

            Plenty of munitions have 'use by' dates.

            Why do you think the US tosses so many Tomahawks around after a 'dry' war-free period?

  2. Turtle

    "DARPA looks for a guided bullet with DEAD reckoning navigation"

    You know, I could really use some of those....

  3. CaptainHook
    Headmaster

    Science Fail

    navigation is just a matter of knowing one's __VELOCITY__ and duration of travel - with suitable accuracy of course.

    ****

    FTFY

    navigation with speed and time is useless without direction but velocity contains a direction compnent.

    1. Don Jefe
      Happy

      Re: Science Fail

      Have you been listening to 'They Might Be Giants'? You've almost directly quoted from their kids science album.

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    'DARPA's research rarely produces tangible results'

    Bit unfair, no?

    1. Crisp

      Re: DARPA's research rarely produces tangible results

      Yeah, like that ARPANet. Whatever happened to that pie in the sky project?

      1. Rampant Spaniel

        Not fair! I distinctly remember they managed to build some portable air conditioned holding tanks inside small hangers for trained navy dolphins so they could survive in the desert and be deployed in rivers and the gulf by Iraq.

  5. Pen-y-gors

    "Jackal" eat your heart out.

    If they develop these it's only a matter of time before the 'bad' guys get hold of some (given that it's the USA they'll probably have a constitutional right to buy them on Amazon) - and that means there's not a politician in the world will be safe. Has Obama authorised this project?

    1. Psyx
      FAIL

      Re: "Jackal" eat your heart out.

      "and that means there's not a politician in the world will be safe. Has Obama authorised this project?"

      That's a stupid-ass comment.

      Sniper rifles can already hit people over a Km away and have been able to do so for years, and yet politicians aren't being gunned down by them in droves. What makes you think that increasing that range to maybe 3km will make a lick of difference.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: "Sniper rifles can already

        Yep...

        I work near a law court and see the met posturing outside with their sub machine guns, body armour and poor firearms discipline from time to time, and it has occured to me that two WW One era snipers suitably located could take the lot out without even drawing breath, let alone what could be done with modern kit.

      2. fajensen
        Flame

        Re: "Jackal" eat your heart out.

        Maybe this: The area to be guarded grows in proportion to the radius squared and "they" will run out of either donuts or guards rather quickly? The difference by going from a1 km to a 3 km protection zone is nine times more personnel for the same job!

        OTOH - Mortars already cover 3 km and they have the advantage that the attacker could be well on his way before the first round lands.

        Maybe only crazy people care about politicians after all - and being crazy, they cannot organize anything?

        1. Turtle

          @fajensen: Re: "Jackal" eat your heart out.

          Well, Marshall Applewhite was certifiable and he organized Heaven's Gate. That was a pretty effective organization from an, uh, organizational point of view...

      3. Steve the Cynic

        Re: "Jackal" eat your heart out.

        "Sniper rifles can already hit people over a Km away"

        AND

        "increasing that range to maybe 3km"

        Well, given that the record for sniper hits is documented at 2815m, increasing the range to 3km doesn't sound like much of an achievement.

        It's also worth noting that the article tries to make a distinction between .50 cal weapons and sniper rifles. All but one of the sniper hits beyond 2km listed in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longest_recorded_sniper_kills were made with .50 cal weapons, either specialist sniping weapons or in one case an M2 machine gun.

        1. Psyx
          Stop

          Re: "Jackal" eat your heart out.

          "Well, given that the record for sniper hits is documented at 2815m, increasing the range to 3km doesn't sound like much of an achievement."

          Smug stat; moot point.

          It was a highly trained sniper, using a large AMR, and wasn't even a first-round kill. That's of very little comparative value. Whereas a good shooter with a firearm of much more reasonable size and calibre can wax someone 1km away without much fuss. Using extreme examples isn't really of much use to anyone.

          I'm pretty sure .50 HMG gunners in SF roles have mowed plenty of people at more than 3km anyway.

      4. Annihilator
        Headmaster

        Re: "Jackal" eat your heart out.

        "Sniper rifles can already hit people over a Km away and have been able to do so for years, and yet politicians aren't being gunned down by them in droves. What makes you think that increasing that range to maybe 3km will make a lick of difference."

        Fair point, but the ability to hit what you want to hit at that range is quite a specialist skill (and requires very well known and constrained atmospheric conditions). Give a sniper rifle to Joe Bloggs and he's be lucky to hit a multistory carpark at that range, let alone a person in it.

        But yeah, I agree with you, preventing DARPA from coming up with such a thing doesn't keep Pandora's box shut.

    2. Helena Handcart

      Re: "Jackal" eat your heart out.

      "and that means there's not a politician in the world will be safe"

      I don't see a problem here.

  6. Shakes

    Reference position?

    Having actually implemented a simple dead-reckoning algorithm to track vehicle movement between GPS fixes (when passing through a tunnel, for instance), I wonder how they get an accurate position in the first place?

    1. Imsimil Berati-Lahn
      Go

      Re: Reference position?

      Simple:

      They measure the angle between a number of celestial bodies and the horizon and determine the offset angle between their position and the ground point of the chosen body by referencing almanac data for the chosen body against an accurate time reference then finding the intersection of the offset angles. Oh yeah, probably the easiest way to get an accurate time reference these days is from the GPS constellation, but hey ho.

    2. Phil O'Sophical Silver badge

      Re: Reference position?

      > I wonder how they get an accurate position in the first place?

      They don't need one, all they need is an accurate relative position for the target.

    3. This post has been deleted by its author

    4. Anonymous Coward
      Stop

      Re: Reference position?

      In an ideal shot, there would be only the (predictable) acceleration (negative of course) from the air friction. Any other acceleration vectors (including a difference to the predicted acceleration) are due to unexpected wind occurence.

      The control algorithm/circuit in the bullet will record these acceleation vectors over time, will integrate these over time and then attempt to perform counter-accelerations (via fins or thrust vector nozzles).

      As Mr Newton put it:

      v(t)= INTEGRAL(a(t)*dt)

      s(t)=INTEGRAL(v(t)*dt)

      So if you have an ultra-precise acceleration sensor (very difficult)and an ultra-precise integrator (easier, can be done with a digital thing called computer), you know very well your s(t). In all directions of space, of course. You also need a very precise clock, but that we can do for a long time with quartz clocks (at least for the bullets).

  7. This post has been deleted by its author

  8. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    How is navigation performed?

    Once the bullet knows it has to change course, how does it actually do it? Flaps? Onboard gaz jet?

    1. Martin Budden Silver badge
      Paris Hilton

      Re: How is navigation performed?

      Pivoting Inflight Streamlined Steering flaps.

      I wish I could think of a suitable acronym for that.

    2. kit

      Re: How is navigation performed?

      It all comes down to the nano-nisation of microelectronics, Imaging if you can integrate a tiny camera together with image processing processor all inside the bullet. It is not impossible to have a guided bullet does what you want to shoot at.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: How is navigation performed?

        And you don't need a camera in the bullet IF the accelerometer is sufficiently precise. All you will do is to load the desired trajectory into the bullet and then the bullet control system will try to control course according to that intended trajectory. That's why they say "dead" reckoning. Because there are no "live eyes" looking out of the window.

        I also assume the first application will be smart bombs cued by FLIRs. Maybe the Great Colonel actually did some GPS jamming we are not aware of. Or they want to send the gracious eternal leader of norkia a message and he is already doing massive GPS jamming.

  9. Don Jefe

    Still a Bullet?

    A bullet is an unguided non powered projectile. What will this thing actually be?

    1. JimC
      Headmaster

      Re: Still a Bullet?

      So long as it misses me I won't care what its defined as - and if it hits me I'll care even less...

      1. Ru

        Re: Still a Bullet?

        and if it hits me I'll care even less...

        You are of course assuming that the intent is always to kill.

  10. Oldfogey
    Headmaster

    Deceased Navigation?

    What is this Dead Reckoning of which you speak? Do zombies use it to find Brainz?

    The correct term is DED reckoning - short for deduced reckoning, in that your current position is deduced from a previously known position, using knowledge of your course, speed, wind/tide drift etc.

    Of course if you get it wrong you may end up dead.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Deceased Navigation?

      Maybe you are right about acronyms, but it seems to work via integrating first acceleration then speed to yield position.

    2. Steven Roper

      Re: Deceased Navigation?

      It's been called "dead reckoning" for as long as I can remember and quite some time before that. I recall reading about pilots using it in VFR, about offsetting the nose of the aircraft from the destination to compensate for crosswinds, in a book about aircraft I had as a kid back in the 70s. And Melville also uses the term in Moby Dick, when he describes in some detail the "log and line" method of navigating: You heave a log tied to a line overboard and count how long the ship takes to sail past it. Melville's protagonist even points out how this method is unreliable and inaccurate compared to the quadrant, which Ahab had destroyed during one of his psychotic episodes the day before.

      So "dead reckoning" goes back close to a couple of centuries at least.

  11. Brian Miller

    Too much in too small a space

    The only reason that bullets fly so far is because they are *dense* *as* *lead*. If they aren't that dense, they don't fly as far. Even with something as large as a .50-cal bullet (and I mean the /bullet/, not the entire cartridge), there isn't enough space for both electronics, navigation control, and *mass*.

    Another critical point is that the bullet will be rotating in flight, and doing so very quickly. Is the navigational control going to be able to overcome wind drift? If it can't even do that, then it's useless.

    Basically, this is a money-wasting project. Nothing new. A bullet has to be dense and travel extremely fast. Anything else defeats the purpose of it being a bullet.

    1. MD Rackham

      Re: Too much in too small a space

      No problem: just use depleted livermorium.

      (Just make sure you can get that round fired quickly!)

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Stop

      With Some Cold-U238 Teutonic Rationality

      ..I would counter your argument saying that you can compensate quite a bit of "hollowness" by using U238 instead of lead. So the tip of the projectile would be extremely heavy to allow for the bottom to perfom some navigation/stabilization wizardry.

      Quite interesting engineering challenge, even though it seems there are already more than enough ways to kill people at a distance.

      I also assume some sort of lightweight, mobile radar or laser tracking a sniper bullet, followed by a rapid second shot which corrects for the curent wind situation would probably be as effective. Or even more, as you don't need the hollow space for the navigation/stabilization stuff.

    3. Psyx
      FAIL

      Re: Too much in too small a space

      Of course, you know more about the entire project sat in your armchair than all the people with Phds working on it.

      Bullets fly so fast because they are dense and fast. They travel much less further than they could because they are fired at a shallow angle. Add a guidance system and you can loft them at a more optimum trajectory like a arrow, overcoming any deficit due to lower mass. Put in some dense material such as tungsten or DU and you can partially overcome any shortfall due to not using lead, anyway.

      In short, I'm pretty sure the well-paid people have thought a bit more about it than even you, so I don't see the point of rubbishing a project that we know barely anything about.

  12. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    G forces at moment of firing

    G forces at the moment of firing are not a problem. In WW2, proximity fused anti-aircraft rounds were used extensively in the Pacific war (and are credited with making Kamikaze attacks significantly less effective). They used vacuum tubes, not solid state electronics, which hadn't been invented yet. True, they were specialized vacuum tubes, but they could obviously stand the shock of being blasted out of a anti-aircraft gun and still work.

  13. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    Another Advantage

    Assume you want to take out a tank with a missile. But the tank is modern, detects the incoming missile and will immediately emgulf itself with smoke and multi-spectral chaff. Plus it will eject a number of broadband RF jammers and IR decoys. Maybe it will turn on its powerful laser to try to blind the missile camera.

    Your missile is even smarter than the tank, detects the countermeasures and switches to inertial navigation mode using these super-precise accelerometers. If there was a proper initial fix (from say two cameras 50 meters distance), the missile can still do the dive-on-the-weak-top way of hitting the sucker-cooker.

  14. SkippyBing

    Global Positioning System (GPS, which makes almost all the world's satnav systems work)

    Do you per chance mean the NavSTaR* GPS system run by the USAF?

    As opposed to the Galileo GPS system, not run by anyone yet or the GLONASS GPS system run by Russia?

    A small point but all the world's satnav systems are GPS, the one most of us use is NavSTaR.

    *Navigation Signal Timing and Ranging

  15. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Voila, the ZF-1

    But does it have Replay ?

    http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=7jVsQToSfag

  16. oldcoder

    Claiming GPS is not precise is an error

    Regular GPS can determine a position to within inches. And that is using the standard range-range computation from 4 satellites.

    The reason the government quit restricting the precision was that doing so was useless. It DID retard simple range-range computation... But using hyperbolics instead of ranges restored the precision back to the high precision.

    This was known even when GPS was originally produced - it was just that the computers available at the time took a much longer time to compute the position. In range-range mode, it would take approximately 10 seconds to compute a position (from the original Trimble GPS receiver), but computing a hyperbolic position would take a bit over 30-45 seconds.

    In between good position fixes, navigation systems used dead reckoning to compute intermediate positions - an updated position every tenth of a second.

    Current GPS positions can easily be done in 10 seconds (the interval is due to the message length, not computation limits), and less than an additional tenth of a second more needed for a hyperbolic position. And that would be good for sub-centimeter positions.

    1. Allan George Dyer
      Boffin

      Re: Claiming GPS is not precise is an error

      So you can do a GPS calculation in 10 seconds, and the flight time of a bullet over 3km is 2 or 3 seconds.

      Tell me again how useful it is to have a GPS bullet...

This topic is closed for new posts.

Other stories you might like