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Universal command and control language early system engineering study : performance effects of a universal command and control standard / James Dimarogonas [and 8 others].

Van Pelt Library UB212 .D56 2023
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Dimarogonas, James, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Command and control systems--United States.
Command and control systems.
Physical Description:
xxiv, 104 pages ; 26 cm
Place of Publication:
Santa Monica, Calif. : RAND Corporation, [2023]
Summary:
The U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) requires more efficient and timely methods to acquire, integrate, and interoperate systems, and perhaps more crucially systems-of-systems (SoSs), to deter near-peer adversaries in a rapidly evolving threat environment and prevail in combat should deterrence fail. Current practice for integration across systems generally relies on the development of interface control documents that describe in detail how the different systems and subsystems connect and interact. In 2019, RAND researchers were asked to participate in a multiyear effort to help DoD understand the challenges of creating a universal command and control language (UCCL) to facilitate the evolution of systems and interoperability of SoSs. In this report, the authors establish a conceptual framework for analyzing SoS performance of different sensor-to-shooter connections, combinations, and associated command and control constructs. The analysis shows that implementation details of a standard interface may contribute to interface overhead that changes technical performance by orders of magnitude. Overall, while the authors found that there are cases in which mission performance is mainly driven by operational parameters and not the interface design, there are also cases in which implementing a standard interface has the potential to adversely influence mission outcomes if designers do not apply in-depth engineering analysis and careful design practice. This research should not be viewed as a study of a specific standard interface, but as an early system engineering study of how such an interface could and should be designed.
Contents:
Chapter One: Introduction
Chapter Two: Methodology
Chapter Three: Standards
Chapter Four: Insights from Testing and Experimentation
Chapter Five: Electronic Warfare Mission Thread
Chapter Six: Active Protection System Mission Thread
Chapter Seven: Ballistic Missile Defense Mission Thread
Chapter Eight: Conclusions
Appendix: Publish and Subscribe Overview.
Notes:
"Prepared for Office of the Secretary of Defense, approved for public release; distribution unlimited."
"RAND National Defense Research Institute."
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN:
9781977408662
1977408664
OCLC:
1371335239

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