Radio system submitted to NSA for testing
Tuesday, April 19, 2011 5:01 AM By dwi
NASHVILLE, Apr 19 (UPI) -- A Lockheed histrion joint tactical broadcasting system has been submitted to the U.S. National Security Agency for certification testing, the company said.
The Airborne and Maritime/Fixed Station Joint Tactical Radio System is an encrypted, Internet Protocol, software-reprogrammable, multi-band/multi-mode capable, mobile ad-hoc network that module enable U.S. Army, Air Force and Navy warfighters to deal real-time voice, recording and data communications.
AMF JTRS module be the prototypal JTRS aggregation that module link air, connector and seafaring echelons.
"Since the program's award, the AMF JTRS team has fashioned the system with NSA certification in mind," said Mark Norris, evilness president for Joint Tactical Network Solutions with Lockheed Martin's Information Systems and Global Solutions-Defense.
"We module move to impact closely with the NSA to ensure that AMF JTRS satisfies every their security requirements."
AMF JTRS includes a two-channel, Small Airborne Joint Tactical Radio, a four-channel (scalable to eight channels) Maritime/Fixed Joint Tactical Radio and ordinary ancillaries that module support papers integration.
The flooded duplex, software-defined radios module be desegrated into airborne, shipboard and fixed-station platforms, sanctioning shipping and airborne forces to communicate seamlessly and with greater efficiency.
Being software-defined, AMF is also confident of heritage waveform communications, reaction the cost to maintain and supply heritage devices during aggregation capability migration, Lockheed histrion said.
Over the program's lifetime, a minimum of 28 waveforms module be merged into AMF JTRS.
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