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FBO DAILY ISSUE OF AUGUST 21, 2011 FBO #3557
DOCUMENT

A -- TACTICAL NIGHTTIME WIDE AREA SURVEILLANCE - Link to BAA page.

Notice Date
8/19/2011
 
Notice Type
Link to BAA page.
 
NAICS
541712 — Research and Development in the Physical, Engineering, and Life Sciences (except Biotechnology)
 
Contracting Office
Department of the Navy, Office of Naval Research, Naval Research Laboratory, 4555 Overlook Ave. S.W., Washington, District of Columbia, 20375
 
ZIP Code
20375
 
Solicitation Number
BAA-N00173-5601
 
Point of Contact
Mary A. Johnson, Phone: 2027672021, Carol A Parnell, Phone: 202-767-2372
 
E-Mail Address
mary.johnson@nrl.navy.mil, carol.parnell@nrl.navy.mil
(mary.johnson@nrl.navy.mil, carol.parnell@nrl.navy.mil)
 
Small Business Set-Aside
N/A
 
Description
This effort is intended to provide the research and development for a prototype sensor capability that enables tactical nighttime wide field-of-view (FOV) persistent surveillance using a SHADOW UAS. This sensor is intended to surveil a wide area with adequate resolution to enable overall situational awareness of moving objects, including vehicles and personnel. It is also intended to provide enhanced resolution in one or more selected sub-areas of the surveiled area for the purpose of classification and identification of targets and target details. Provided below are a number of parameters that that are intended to aid in developing such a sensor capability for a Shadow 200 UAS. 6.1 Background This effort is part of a larger ONR program termed Wide Area Surgical and Persistent Surveillance (WASPS) Capabilities For Group 3/4 UAVs (EMW-FY12-03). The overall goal of the WASPS Capabilities For Group 3/4 UAVs is to enable new sensor and sensor information fusion capabilities to improve battlefield awareness for the Marine Corps, improve the capability to assure access and hold at risk, and enable power projection in environments that are not currently accessible. It will accomplish that in part using small, low cost, highly capable persistent surveillance sensors mounted in Tier II or Tier III class Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) combined with decision support tools to expose enemy networks and vulnerabilities. The effort described here will focus on the development of a day/night wide area persistent surveillance sensor payload system to support the overall program This product will develop a tactical nighttime wide field-of-view (FOV) persistent surveillance sensor including an added capability to generate enhanced resolution imagery over a reduced sub-area. It will provide a sensor capability for surveying a wide area with adequate resolution to enable overall situational awareness of moving objects, including personnel. It will also provide achieve enhanced resolution in multiple selected regions of the image for the purpose of classification and identification of targets and target details. The above capabilities are desired within the size, weight, and power (SWaP) required for a Shadow 200 UAS. Hence, there are a number of key goals for the wide area persistent surveillance capability being sought by this BAA. One is the ability of the sensor system to survey a wide area with adequate resolution to enable overall situational awareness of moving objects, including personnel. Another is the ability to achieve enhanced resolution in a selected region or regions of the image for the purpose of classification and identification of targets and target details. A third is the ability to perform appropriate pointing and stabilization actions, as well as any needed optical zoom functions. A fourth is being able to perform the first three functions within the size, weight, and power (SWaP) required for a Shadow 200. A more detailed discussion of the required capabilities will be presented in the Program Design and Performance Goals section of this BAA. It is understood that certain mechanical systems may be necessary in the final sensor system design. It is also understood that the choice of a visible sensor or an IR sensor, or both for the narrow field-of-view portion, will depend on a number of tradeoffs concerning the system SWaP. Assuming that the SWaP requirements are met, the prime goals of the sensor system will be to achieve large area persistent surveillance with the ability to zoom into at least one region of the image. Note that the sensor system is not the only component of the payload. Other processing and communication resources will be necessary in the final, combined, actionable intelligence payload. The Tactical Nighttime Wide Area Surveillance Program is planned as a 4-year research and development activity culminating in a prototype sensor capability that enables tactical nighttime wide field-of-view (FOV) persistent surveillance using a SHADOW UAS.. The program should be planned accordingly and proposals shall address the following areas as a minimum: • Technical: A summary of the technical approach that demonstrates the potential to fulfill the requirements described herein. • Experience: A summary of experience and qualifications including technical and management competencies. • Costs: A summary of planned expenditures. It is anticipated that the program will consist of a number of phases. The first will be an initial concept refinement phase (6 months) ending in a Preliminary Design Review, followed by a phase comprising detailed system design, a phase for fabrication and physical integration and a phase for electrical and software integration and testing efforts.A single award will be made for all phases. The phase for integration and testing will be conducted jointly with the government.Proposed solutions should include technical innovation and be consistent with delivering a working prototype sensor system within the allotted timeframe and the associated budget, with identifiable and manageable technical and schedule risk. This program will address current shortfalls summarized by the following: • Fielded high resolution, wide field of view, UAV borne imaging sensors are not nighttime capable • Tactical units at the lowest echelon (team, squad, boat, patrol) now receive little or no timely moderate resolution imagery, which is useful for situational awareness, because they have very few or no organic ISR assets under their control • Tactical units now receive no timely high resolution imagery useful for identification and/or remote inspection of dismounts 6.2 Program Design and Performance Goals This BAA seeks research and development of an approach for a MWIR nighttime persistent surveillance sensor payload for center-line installation on a Shadow 200 UAS, flying at a nominal altitude of 12 kft above ground level (AGL).In the target persistent surveillance scenario, the sensor repeatedly images a wide field of view (WFOV) (~4 km diameter) ground area at 8 Hz or higher full frame rate.The ground sampled distance (GSD) goal is 0.5 m.The sensor should have the capability to permit super-resolution processing to achieve 0.7 m GRD at effective rates of 2 Hz or higher.As an additional goal, the sensor should be capable of providing up to ten Narrow Field of View (NFOV) 640 x 480 pixel ground patch image streams at 8 Hz or higher.The imagery from at least one of these patch streams should be of a substantially better spatial resolution (Goal:0.12 m GSD) to support remote inspection of dismounts. In view of the tight 0.12 m GSD goal, concepts based on shorter wavelength sensing will be considered for the 0.12 m stream(s). Achievement of these goals using a multi-axis gimbal hosting large wide field of view optics and a large format MWIR camera is relatively straightforward.However, the size, weight and power (SWaP) constraints characteristic of a small Shadow 200 UAV are expected to require innovations in any viable developmental approach for this program. The optical trains for both the WFOV and NFOV streams may be developed under this BAA effort. However, submitted proposals may utilize GFE optical systems being developed under the companion ONR Ultra Wide FOV program. This companion program will also provide a method to capture the NFOV imagery, either by the use of a separate camera or by usingpart of the large imaging module. A second companion program is developing a 64 Mpixel MWIR imaging module compatible with the Ulta Wide FOV optical train, and is expected to demonstrate an imaging module technology in a time frame compatible with this BAA program.However the imaging module will not be supplied as GFE for this BAA. The program described by this BAA will develop and produce a lightweight capability that functions similarly to a two axis stabilized pointing system that will host the components described above on the Shadow centerline. Stability of the line-of-sight (LOS) is a stressing requirement for a small UAV payload.Roll stabilization / pointing will require a mechanical approach consistent with +/- 15 degrees of travel in both axes.Shadow 200 platform roll/pitch/yaw and vibrational environment data will be provided to qualified bidders as GFI.In the standard persistent surveillance scenario, a series of acquire image commands will come in from an onboard sensor management system (SMS) at 2 per second.During the exposure, the LOS jitter goal is less than 0.05 mrad rms.For the purposes of this document, jitter is defined as random angular excursions at high frequencies (100 Hz and higher). In addition to the jitter goal, there is a low frequency drift goal of less than 5 mrad/sec.These goals are predicated on a nominal 3 msec image exposure time. These jitter and drift goals, together with a residual image distortion goal, impose a derived goal on the precision and accuracy of the "on-bench" IMU.If a scanning or step/stare approach is considered, a more stringent derived goal is expected to be imposed on the data rate from the IMU so that the above image quality goals can be met.In any case, the minimum IMU data rate goal is 100 Hz. The residual image distortion goal is to be compatible with a georegistration process resulting in less than 0.07m rms of residual image distortion. In addition to the LOS stabilization goals, when imaging ground (not open water) target areas, the pointing system should be capable of repeatedly pointing the center of the field of view to the same point on the ground with precision (not accuracy) of 1.5 m over time intervals of order 100 sec. Specific SWaP goals for the sensor payload are:40 pounds weight, and 200 watts peak power.The size/volume goal is to be compatible with centerline mounting on the Shadow UAV. There is more flexibility with the power goal than with the others.These goals are intended to be consistent with a ~ 10 pound sensor management system (SMS) co-located in the UAV centerline payload space onboard the UAV platform.Existing platform GPS and navigational systems are exclusive of this SWaP budget, however, their output data streams may be available to the proposed payload. If proposed, any high quality inertial measurement system (IMS) on the optical bench must be accommodated within the SWAP budget. The weight budget comprises two parts.The first part, estimated at 20 pounds, is the weight of the optics being developed by the companion program mentioned above. The second part, estimated at 20 pounds, is the weight of the elements to be developed under this program. Specifically, this program will also include the development and delivery of an approach that functions similarlyto a two axis pointing and stabilization system, an imaging system capable of imaging the FOV's with the resolutions and sample rates described above, the mechanical parts needed for final integration, and participation in government led aircraft integration and testing. A significant integration effort will be the integration and testing of the camera and optics with the two axis stabilization system developed. The goals for the integrated equipment are as stated below: • Two axis stabilization with +/- 15 degrees of travel in both axes • Jitter < 0.05 mrad rms • Drift < 5 mrad /sec • Center point held to precision of 1.5 m (100 sec time frame) • Compatible with centerline mounting on Shadow. • Supports super-resolution or alternate sampling approaches to achieve GRD = 0.7 m • Compatible with georegistration processing to achieve rms residual image distortion less than 0.07 m The weight goal for the parts developed under this program (If all the optical components developed by the first companion program are used), including the large format MWIR camera, is 20 lbs.The total weight goal for the integrated payload, except for the SMS and associated processing components, is 40 lbs.Modular design and clear definition of interfaces are also design goals for this program.Certain image processing steps necessary in achieving the image quality, GRD and geo-registration goals may ultimately be executed in the SMS and/or ground station.These include bad pixel compensation, non-uniformity compensation, relative calibration, image formation/formatting, super resolution, data compression, tagging with metrology data, and georegistration.The later operation, to be hosted in the ground station, is critical to achieving the residual image distortion goal.Georegistration performance will be limited by the quality of the metrology data and the details of the image formation scheme.While the SMS and ground station are not covered under this BAA, some of the top level goals (including GRD and residual distortion) depend on operations that will ultimately be hosted there.Consequently, the development work sought under this BAA must include a processing approach and developmental hardware for implementation of the processing steps mentioned in this paragraph.In the course of the work, raw data from the sensor proper will be processed with the developmental hardware to produce corrected, calibrated, georegistered images.These processed images will be evaluated against the goals described above.NRL may elect to rehost some or all of the image processing steps in an SMS payload.The software, hardware and data rights associated with this work must make such rehosting possible. The interface between the sensor payload and the SMS co-payload is expected to be based on a standard format for commands, such as XML, and a standard for data format over optical fiber.Data will flow to the SMS in uncompressed form (two bytes per datum) at the rate of 8 full frames per second or higher.The development of the SMS will occur in parallel with the work of this BAA, but is not covered under this BAA.Coordination will be accomplished through technical interchange meetings. Consequently, it will be necessary to design and build a sensor software simulation under this BAA so that smooth sensor / SMS integration can be efficiently accomplished. It is anticipated that the government will undertake the airborne test of the prototype hardware that is developed, fabricated and delivered in this effort.A limited amount of support from the organization performing the work of this BAA will be required as part of this project to interface the sensor with the government supplied aircraft, control, data acquisition and dissemination systems. The fleet of Shadow UAV platforms may not be dedicated exclusively to the persistent surveillance mission.This dictates a goal that the sensor payload will be capable of being swapped with standard POP-300 ball in less than 1 hour. Threshold Goals: 0.5 GSD at 12k' AGL ; nominal IFOV = 0.12 mrad 4 km diameter area Pointing repeatability1.5 m Full frame @ 8 Hz Optics MTF > 0.5 at 4cy/mradand >0.1 at 8 cy/mrad[at λ = 4 micron] LOS Jitter < 0.05mrad rms@100 Hz & up Low frequency LOS drift < 5 mrad /sec Compatible with residual image distortion < 0.07 mrms, Compatible with super-resolution or other sampled technique achieving GRD =.7m <1 hr swap time of gimbal hardware and replacement with Pop-300 ball GSD < 0.12 m for a single patch data stream NEDT < 70 mK
 
Web Link
FBO.gov Permalink
(https://www.fbo.gov/spg/DON/ONR/N00173/BAA-N00173-5601/listing.html)
 
Document(s)
Link to BAA page.
 
File Name: Link to BAA page. (http://heron.nrl.navy.mil/contracts/index5601.htm)
Link: http://heron.nrl.navy.mil/contracts/index5601.htm

 
Note: If links are broken, refer to Point of Contact above or contact the FBO Help Desk at 877-472-3779.
 
Place of Performance
Address: Naval Research Laboratory, 4555 Overlook Avenue SW, Washington, District of Columbia, 20375-5320, United States
Zip Code: 20375-5320
 
Record
SN02541628-W 20110821/110819235119-adcab4af6a716763a47cb0a33e4c250f (fbodaily.com)
 
Source
FedBizOpps Link to This Notice
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