. 24/7 Space News .
USAF Selects NGC To Provide New, Improved Navigation System For F-16 Fighter


Woodland Hills CA (SPX) Jan 09, 2006
Northrop Grumman Corporation's newest fiber optic gyro inertial navigation system, the LN-260, has been selected by the U.S. Air Force as an avionics upgrade for the F-16 Multinational Fighter Program aircraft fleet.

"The Northrop Grumman LN-260 provides high reliability and improved aircraft navigation and targeting capabilities as a retrofit upgrade to existing aircraft and new production aircraft," said Mark Casady, vice president of navigation and positioning systems at Northrop Grumman's Navigation Systems Division.

"Benefiting from low-noise fiber-optic-gyro technologies, the LN-260 eliminates the self-induced acceleration and velocity noise experienced by dithered laser-gyro systems, resulting in greatly reduced target location errors (TLE) and improved synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery."

"In a series of test flights earlier this year on an F-16 test aircraft and on board a Northrop Grumman testbed aircraft equipped with an F-16 fire control radar, the LN-260 demonstrated significant improvements in both navigation and targeting capabilities over the aircraft's current navigation system," said Gary Mallaley, LN-260 program manager at the company's Navigation Systems Division.

As a testimony to the LN-260's performance, Dave Bouchard, director of F-16 radar systems at Northrop Grumman's Aerospace Systems Division said, "We made 148 synthetic aperture radar maps with the LN-260 and found them among the best seen in our flight-test program."

The LN-260 is a completely integrated navigation system (INS) with a selective availability/anti-spoofing module compliant embedded global positioning system (GPS) receiver. The fully integrated, tightly coupled GPS inertial design provides superior performance relative to other embedded INS/GPS systems.

Its modular open system architecture allows it to be easily adapted to new applications, to new system requirements and to improve performance of mission equipment and flight control systems.

The LN-260 inertial navigation system uses the advanced fiber-optic-gyroscope-based inertial sensor assembly already successfully deployed on the LN-251, currently in high-rate production at Northrop Grumman's Navigation System Division. The LN-260 INS/GPS replacement system offers combat aircraft high performance, high reliability, light weight and low power consumption.

"We see a bright future for the LN-260," said Mallaley. "The F-16 win will showcase the LN-260's capabilities and demonstrate how it can enhance the performance of all classes of existing U.S. and international military aircraft."

The F-16 Fighting Falcon, produced by Lockheed Martin, is a compact, multirole fighter aircraft used by the United States and allied and coalition partner nations. It can locate targets in all weather conditions and detect low-flying aircraft in radar ground clutter.

In an air-to-surface role, the F-16 can fly more than 500 miles (860 kilometers), deliver its weapons with superior accuracy, defend itself against enemy aircraft and return to its starting point. An all-weather capability allows it to accurately deliver ordnance during non-visual bombing conditions. Northrop Grumman also produces the radar for the F-16 aircraft at its facilities in Baltimore.

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Airbus Looks To Lightweight Future
Paris (AFP) Jan 09, 2006
European aircraft maker Airbus plans to launch a new generation of planes built with light, composite materials to help increase fuel efficiency, a senior company executive said on Monday.







  • Microbes Survive Firey Plunge By Columbia
  • Spicing Up Space Meals
  • SpaceDev Appoints New Chief Executive Officer And Vice Chairman
  • ZeroG Aerospace Launches Affordable Space Tourism for the Masses

  • Opportunity Snaps A Fine Example Of A 'Festoon' Pattern In Meridiani Outcrop
  • Opportunity Puts The Arm On Ted
  • Spirit Heading To 'Home Plate'
  • Mars Exploration Rovers Advance Understanding Of The Red Planet

  • Europe's Arianespace Satellite Launcher Hits Cruising Speed
  • ILS to Launch ASTRA 1KR in 2006
  • Telematic Solutions Awarded EUR8Mn Contract For Vega Pad Work In Kourou,
  • Telematic Solutions Awarded EUR8Mn Contract For Vega Pad Work In Kourou,

  • Indian Small EO Satellites To Study Atmosphere
  • Space Imaging Awarded Additional $24 Mln From Pentagon's NGA
  • NG Ships First Advanced Tech Microwave Sounder Flight Instrument To NASA
  • The Topex/Poseidon Oceanography Mission Ends

  • New Horizons Remains On Course For January 17 Launch To Pluto
  • Scientists Show Pluto To Be Colder Than It Should Be
  • Astronomers Measure The Most Distant Moon
  • New Horizons Launch Vehicle Fully Assembled For Voyage To Pluto

  • Experiments Help Explain Mysterious Floppy Space Molecule
  • Milky Way Is Warped, Vibrates Like A Drum, Scientists Say
  • Looking Down The Mouth Of An Interstellar Cavern
  • There Is More To Starlight Than Meets The Eye

  • Apollo Chronicles
  • An Explosion On The Moon
  • SMART 1 Uses New Imaging Technique In Lunar Orbit
  • Moon Storms

  • Galileo GIOVEA Using Marotta Equipment For Its Propulsion Systems
  • SiRFstarIII Featured in TomToms Innovative Portable Navigation Product
  • EGNOS Demonstration In South Africa
  • Europe Opens Up Civil Navigation System With Galileo Satellite

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement