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Satnews Daily
August 17th, 2010

ARINC... Coming To C4ISR (Event)


[SatNews] The upcoming Team C4ISR Symposium will be the event where ARINC Engineering Services plans to highlight five advanced tools.

These five tools and solutions will be highlighted August 23-26 at the 2010 Team C4ISR Symposium in Baltimore, MD, hosted by U.S. Army CECOM. ARINC currently supports all branches of the U.S. Military on nine major DoD acquisition vehicles, including the new U.S. Army CECOM R2-3G (Rapid Response-3rd Generation) contract just announced. ARINC received its award notification July 30 following a re-compete of the popular acquisition program.

C4ISR On The Move—ARINC’s Beyond Line-of-Sight (BLoS) Interoperable Mobile IP Communications, using ARINC’s Global Network and IP Mobility technology, delivers global BLoS connectivity in the field, with seamless transition between satellite beams.

Radio Interoperability—ARINC’s solutions interconnect all types of radio and terrestrial networks, including UHF and VHF analog, mobile digital, Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) systems, ship-to-shore, air-to-ground, standard phones, and cellular.

Network Modeling & Exploitation—ARINC NEMESYSTM fuses the data from disparate networks to deliver a common operational picture: communications, computer, SCADA, military, and more. Integral ‘what-if’ analysis predicts network reaction to damage and provides real-time assessment of affected users.

Antenna Design—Advanced ARINC modeling capability creates antennas that are “right the first time,” with prototypes that require only minor adjustment. This expertise significantly reduces the time to full-scale production.

Radiation Pattern Analysis—ARINC’s detailed modeling & simulation accurately predicts antenna radiation patterns as-installed on any platform—airplane, helicopter, ground vehicle, surface vessel, space vehicle, or terrestrial structure. With the platform geometry taken into account, installed performance is optimized, and the costly cycle of install, test, evaluate, modify, and repeat is mitigated.