Lockheed Martin to make major upgrades to submarine electro-optical surveillance system

Sept. 25, 2015
WASHINGTON, 25 Sept. 2015. Submarine combat systems experts at Lockheed Martin Corp. are making major upgrades to a U.S. Navy electro-optical surveillance system designed for several classes of attack and guided-missile submarines.
WASHINGTON, 25 Sept. 2015. Submarine combat systems experts at Lockheed Martin Corp. are making major upgrades to a U.S. Navy electro-optical surveillance system designed for several classes of attack and guided-missile submarines.

Officials of the Naval Sea Systems Command in Washington announced a $120.4 million contract modification on Wednesday to the Lockheed Martin Mission Systems and Training segment in Manassas, Va., to design, test, reverse-engineer, and upgrade important components of the AN/BVY-1 Integrated Submarine Imaging System (ISIS).

ISIS provides mission critical, all-weather, visual, and electronic search, digital image management, indication, warning, and platform architecture interface capabilities for Los Angeles-, Ohio-, and Virginia-class submarines, Navy officials say. The system has the potential for installation on Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines and other kinds of submarines.

ISIS rolls-up existing components and near-term capabilities into an architecture for inserting future capabilities as they become available, including items leveraged from the Virginia-class submarine photonics program, Navy officials say.

Related: Photonics mast, electro-optical sensor suite for attack submarines to come from Kollmorgen

ISIS is a back-fit system to integrate all imaging capabilities on existing Navy submarine classes. It is part of the Navy's submarine Photonics Imaging System, a non-hull-penetrating replacement for existing optical periscopes. The Photonics Imaging System uses a wide portion of the electromagnetic spectrum with advanced daylight cameras, infrared thermal imaging sensors, and communications intercept and electronic warfare support.

The ISIS program seeks to replace the optical light path of existing submarine periscopes with high-definition cameras and fiber optic digital imagery. the project seeks to use infrared cameras for image enhancement, provide active and passive range finding control, and install image enhancement capabilities and analysis tools for real time and recorded imagery.

The ISIS program also will provide Navy submarines with image recording, storage, and recall capabilities, as well as provide the ability to transmit imagery off the submarine to other naval and joint forces.

In-Depth Engineering Corp. in Fairfax, Va., under subcontract to Lockheed Martin, serves as the software development lead for AN/BVY-1 ISIS.

Related: New photonics sensor masts to improve submarine stealth and survivability

ISIS revolutionizes Navy submarine surveillance capabilities by integrating digital video and still images from devices on a submarine's exterior and presenting real-time imagery and analysis on existing control room tactical displays.

ISIS provides digital image enhancement for data from a modern submarine's photonics mast, which uses optical fiber to move imaging data from a raised mast aboard a submerged submarine through tiny openings in the submarine's hull to tactical displays around the interior of the vessel.

The photonics mast replaces or augments the traditional periscope aboard U.S. submarines. The photonics mast not only replaces the large opening in the submarine pressure hull necessary for the optics and hydraulics of a traditional periscope, but also can blend image data from several kinds of electro-optical sensors aboard the photonics mast, including visible-light and infrared cameras.

The ISIS system enables submarine crew members to manipulate a photonics mast with a joystick, while looking at digital video on a computer monitor, and share that video real-time with the submarine's combat team on various displays aboard the vessel.

Related: L-3 to provide optical and electronic submarine masts for Navy Virginia-class attack boats

On this contract modification Lockheed Martin will do the work in Manassas, Va.; Virginia Beach, Va.; Northampton, Mass.; Arlington, Va.; Fairfax, Va.; and Newport, R.I., and should be finished by September 2016.

For more information contact Lockheed Martin Mission Systems and Training online at www.lockheedmartin.com/us/mst.html, In-Depth Engineering Corp. at http://in-depthengineering.com, or Naval Sea Systems Command at www.navsea.navy.mil.

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