Adversarial threats continue to evolve at a fast pace, especially in the areas of electronic warfare (EW) and signal intelligence (SIGINT). Developing solutions to counter these threats can be costly and time-consuming, bogged down by incompatible components and proprietary designs.
To reduce costs and integration times, the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) is turning toward MOSA [modular open systems approach] solutions like the Sensor Open Systems Architecture, or SOSA, Technical Standard and the Command, Control, Computers, Communications, Cyber, Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (C5ISR)/EW Modular Open Suite of Standards (CMOSS); as well as the Modular Open RF Architecture (MORA).
This session details how MOSA strategies can enable EW and SIGINT designers to leverage the best of commercial RF, signal-processing, and AI innovations to field technology more quickly and more affordably over the life of the system.
Beyond OpenVPX: Unveiling the next generation modular form factor for rugged embedded computing VITA 100
learn how platform power requirements are driving designs for modular computer systems designed for use in air and ground vehicles. Subject matter experts David Gash and Ken Grob focus on the challenges posed by varying power levels and specific performance parameters for military platforms.